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Wikipedia

Runway

According to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a runway is a "defined rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and takeoff of aircraft".[1] Runways may be a man-made surface (often asphalt, concrete, or a mixture of both) or a natural surface (grass, dirt, gravel, ice, sand or salt). Runways, taxiways and ramps, are sometimes referred to as "tarmac", though very few runways are built using tarmac. Takeoff and landing areas defined on the surface of water for seaplanes are generally referred to as waterways. Runway lengths are now commonly given in meters worldwide, except in North America where feet are commonly used.[2]

Runway 34 at Nagoya Airfield
An MD-11 at one end of a runway

History

In 1916, in a World War I war effort context, the first concrete-paved runway was built in Clermont-Ferrand in France, allowing local company Michelin to manufacture Bréguet Aviation military aircraft.[citation needed]

In January 1919, aviation pioneer Orville Wright underlined the need for "distinctly marked and carefully prepared landing places, [but] the preparing of the surface of reasonably flat ground [is] an expensive undertaking [and] there would also be a continuous expense for the upkeep."[3]

Headings

For fixed-wing aircraft, it is advantageous to perform takeoffs and landings into the wind to reduce takeoff or landing roll and reduce the ground speed needed to attain flying speed. Larger airports usually have several runways in different directions, so that one can be selected that is most nearly aligned with the wind. Airports with one runway are often constructed to be aligned with the prevailing wind. Compiling a wind rose is in fact one of the preliminary steps taken in constructing airport runways.[4] Wind direction is given as the direction the wind is coming from: a plane taking off from runway 09 faces east, into an "east wind" blowing from 090°.

 
Triangular runway pattern at Armitage Field, Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake

Originally in the 1920s and 1930s, airports and air bases (particularly in the United Kingdom) were built in a triangle-like pattern of three runways at 60° angles to each other. The reason was that back then aviation was only starting, and as a result although it was known that winds affect runway distance required, etc. not much was known about wind behaviour. As a result, three runways in a triangle-like pattern were built, and the runway with the heaviest traffic on it would eventually expand into an airport's main runway, while the other two runways would be either abandoned or converted into taxiways.[5] For example Bristol Airport has only one runway—09/27 (9/27)—and two taxiways that form a 'V' which may have been runways on the original 1930s RAF Lulsgate Bottom airbase.[citation needed]

Naming

 
Runway 22
 
Font and size of numbers and letters

Runways are named by a number between 01 and 36, which is generally the magnetic azimuth of the runway's heading in decadegrees. This heading differs from true north by the local magnetic declination. A runway numbered 09 points east (90°), runway 18 is south (180°), runway 27 points west (270°) and runway 36 points to the north (360° rather than 0°).[6] When taking off from or landing on runway 09, a plane is heading around 90° (east). A runway can normally be used in both directions, and is named for each direction separately: e.g., "runway 15" in one direction is "runway 33" when used in the other. The two numbers differ by 18 (= 180°). For clarity in radio communications, each digit in the runway name is pronounced individually: runway one-five, runway three-three, etc. (instead of "fifteen" or "thirty-three").

 
FAA airport diagram at O'Hare International Airport. The two 14/32 runways go from upper left to lower right, the two 4/22 runways go from lower left to upper right, and the two 9/27 and three 10/28 runways are horizontal.

A leading zero, for example in "runway zero-six" or "runway zero-one-left", is included for all ICAO and some U.S. military airports (such as Edwards Air Force Base). However, most U.S. civil aviation airports drop the leading zero as required by FAA regulation.[7] This also includes some military airfields such as Cairns Army Airfield. This American anomaly may lead to inconsistencies in conversations between American pilots and controllers in other countries. It is very common in a country such as Canada for a controller to clear an incoming American aircraft to, for example, runway 04, and the pilot read back the clearance as runway 4. In flight simulation programs those of American origin might apply U.S. usage to airports around the world. For example, runway 05 at Halifax will appear on the program as the single digit 5 rather than 05.

Military airbases may include smaller paved runways known as "assault strips" for practice and training next to larger primary runways.[8] These strips eschew the standard numerical naming convention and instead employ the runway's full three digit heading; examples include Dobbins Air Reserve Base's Runway 110/290 and Duke Field's Runway 180/360.[9][10]

Runways with non-hard surfaces, such as small turf airfields and waterways for seaplanes, may use the standard numerical scheme or may use traditional compass point naming, examples include Ketchikan Harbor Seaplane Base's Waterway E/W.[11][12] Airports with unpredictable or chaotic water currents, such as Santa Catalina Island's Pebbly Beach Seaplane Base, may designate their landing area as Waterway ALL/WAY to denote the lack of designated landing direction.[13][12]

Letter suffix

 
Runway sign at Madrid-Barajas Airport, Spain

If there is more than one runway pointing in the same direction (parallel runways), each runway is identified by appending left (L), center (C) and right (R) to the end of the runway number to identify its position (when facing its direction)—for example, runways one-five-left (15L), one-five-center (15C), and one-five-right (15R). Runway zero-three-left (03L) becomes runway two-one-right (21R) when used in the opposite direction (derived from adding 18 to the original number for the 180° difference when approaching from the opposite direction). In some countries, regulations mandate that where parallel runways are too close to each other, only one may be used at a time under certain conditions (usually adverse weather).

At large airports with four or more parallel runways (for example, at Chicago O'Hare, Los Angeles, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta, Denver, Dallas–Fort Worth and Orlando), some runway identifiers are shifted by 1 to avoid the ambiguity that would result with more than three parallel runways. For example, in Los Angeles, this system results in runways 6L, 6R, 7L, and 7R, even though all four runways are actually parallel at approximately 69°. At Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, there are five parallel runways, named 17L, 17C, 17R, 18L, and 18R, all oriented at a heading of 175.4°. Occasionally, an airport with only three parallel runways may use different runway identifiers, such as when a third parallel runway was opened at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in 2000 to the south of existing 8R/26L—rather than confusingly becoming the "new" 8R/26L it was instead designated 7R/25L, with the former 8R/26L becoming 7L/25R and 8L/26R becoming 8/26.

Suffixes may also be used to denote special use runways. Airports that have seaplane waterways may choose to denote the waterway on charts with the suffix W; such as Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu and Lake Hood Seaplane Base in Anchorage.[14] Small airports that host various forms of air traffic may employ additional suffixes to denote special runway types based on the type of aircraft expected to use them, including STOL aircraft (S), gliders (G), rotorcraft (H), and ultralights (U).[12] Runways that are numbered relative to true north rather than magnetic north will use the suffix T; this is advantageous for certain airfields in the far north such as Thule Air Base.[15]

Renumbering

Runway designations may change over time because Earth's magnetic lines slowly drift on the surface and the magnetic direction changes. Depending on the airport location and how much drift occurs, it may be necessary to change the runway designation. As runways are designated with headings rounded to the nearest 10°, this affects some runways sooner than others. For example, if the magnetic heading of a runway is 233°, it is designated Runway 23. If the magnetic heading changes downwards by 5 degrees to 228°, the runway remains Runway 23. If on the other hand the original magnetic heading was 226° (Runway 23), and the heading decreased by only 2 degrees to 224°, the runway becomes Runway 22. Because magnetic drift itself is slow, runway designation changes are uncommon, and not welcomed, as they require an accompanying change in aeronautical charts and descriptive documents. When a runway designation does change, especially at major airports, it is often done at night, because taxiway signs need to be changed and the numbers at each end of the runway need to be repainted to the new runway designators. In July 2009 for example, London Stansted Airport in the United Kingdom changed its runway designations from 05/23 to 04/22 during the night.

Declared distances

Runway dimensions vary from as small as 245 m (804 ft) long and 8 m (26 ft) wide in smaller general aviation airports, to 5,500 m (18,045 ft) long and 80 m (262 ft) wide at large international airports built to accommodate the largest jets, to the huge 11,917 m × 274 m (39,098 ft × 899 ft) lake bed runway 17/35 at Edwards Air Force Base in California – developed as a landing site for the Space Shuttle.[16]

Takeoff and landing distances available are given using one of the following terms:

  • Takeoff Run Available (TORA)[17][18] – The length of runway declared available and suitable for the ground run of an airplane taking off.[19]

  • Accelerate-Stop Distance Available (ASDA)[17][18] – The length of the takeoff run available plus the length of the stopway, if stopway is provided.[19]

  • Landing Distance Available (LDA)[17][18] – The length of runway that is declared available and suitable for the ground run of an airplane landing.[20]

  • Emergency Distance Available (EMDA)[21] – LDA (or TORA) plus a stopway.

Sections

There are standards for runway markings.[22]

 
  • The runway thresholds are markings across the runway that denote the beginning and end of the designated space for landing and takeoff under non-emergency conditions.[23]
  • The runway safety area is the cleared, smoothed and graded area around the paved runway. It is kept free from any obstacles that might impede flight or ground roll of aircraft.
  • The runway is the surface from threshold to threshold (including displaced thresholds), which typically features threshold markings, numbers, and centerlines, but excludes blast pads and stopways at both ends.
  • Blast pads are often constructed just before the start of a runway where jet blast produced by large planes during the takeoff roll could otherwise erode the ground and eventually damage the runway.
  • Stopways, also known as overrun areas, are also constructed at the end of runways as emergency space to stop planes that overrun the runway on landing or a rejected takeoff.
    • Blast pads and stopways look similar, and are both marked with yellow chevrons; stopways may optionally be surrounded by red runway lights. The differences are that stopways can support the full weight of an aircraft and are designated for use in an aborted takeoff, while blast pads are often not as strong as the main paved surface of the runway and are not to be used for taxiing, landing, or aborted takeoffs.[24] An engineered materials arrestor system (EMAS) may also be present, which may overlap with the end of the blast pad or stopway and is painted similarly (although an EMAS does not count as part of a stopway).[24]
 
  • Displaced thresholds may be used for taxiing, takeoff, and landing rollout, but not for touchdown. A displaced threshold often exists because of obstacles just before the runway, runway strength, or noise restrictions making the beginning section of runway unsuitable for landings.[25] It is marked with white paint arrows that lead up to the beginning of the landing portion of the runway. As with blast pads, landings on displaced thresholds are not permitted aside from emergency use or exigent circumstance.
 
  • Clearway is an area beyond the paved runway, aligned with the runway centerline and under the control of the airport authorities. This area is not less than 500 ft and there are no protruding obstacles except for threshold lights provided they aren't higher than 26 inches. There is a limit on the upslope of the clearway of 1.25%. The length of the clearway may be included in the length of the takeoff distance available.[26] For example, if a paved runway is 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) long and there are 400 metres (1,300 ft) of clearway beyond the end of the runway, the takeoff distance available is 2,400 metres (7,900 ft) long. When the runway is to be used for takeoff of a large airplane, the maximum permissible takeoff weight of the airplane can be based on the takeoff distance available, including clearway. Clearway allows large airplanes to take off at a heavier weight than would be allowed if only the length of the paved runway is taken into account.

Markings

There are runway markings and signs on most large runways. Larger runways have a distance remaining sign (black box with white numbers). This sign uses a single number to indicate the remaining distance of the runway in thousands of feet. For example, a 7 will indicate 7,000 ft (2,134 m) remaining. The runway threshold is marked by a line of green lights.

 

 
Runway Identifying numbers being painted at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport (KBJC)

There are three types of runways:

  • Visual runways are used at small airstrips and are usually just a strip of grass, gravel, ice, asphalt, or concrete. Although there are usually no markings on a visual runway, they may have threshold markings, designators, and centerlines. Additionally, they do not provide an instrument-based landing procedure; pilots must be able to see the runway to use it. Also, radio communication may not be available and pilots must be self-reliant.
  • Non-precision instrument runways are often used at small- to medium-size airports. These runways, depending on the surface, may be marked with threshold markings, designators, centerlines, and sometimes a 1,000 ft (305 m) mark (known as an aiming point, sometimes installed at 1,500 ft (457 m)). While centerlines provide horizontal position guidance, aiming point markers provide vertical position guidance to planes on visual approach.
  • Precision instrument runways, which are found at medium- and large-size airports, consist of a blast pad/stopway (optional, for airports handling jets), threshold, designator, centerline, aiming point, and 500 ft (152 m), 1,000 ft (305 m)/1,500 ft (457 m), 2,000 ft (610 m), 2,500 ft (762 m), and 3,000 ft (914 m) touchdown zone marks. Precision runways provide both horizontal and vertical guidance for instrument approaches.

Waterways may be unmarked or marked with buoys that follow maritime notation instead.[27]

National variants

  • In Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom,[28] as well as some other countries or territories (Hong Kong and Macau) all 3-stripe and 2-stripe touchdown zones for precision runways are replaced with one-stripe touchdown zones.
  • In some South American countries like Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, one 3-stripe is added and a 2-stripe is replaced with the aiming point.
  • Some European countries replace the aiming point with a 3-stripe touchdown zone.
  • Runways in Norway have yellow markings instead of the usual white ones. This also occurs in some airports in Japan, Sweden, and Finland. The yellow markings are used to ensure better contrast against snow.
  • Runways may have different types of equipment on each end. To reduce costs, many airports do not install precision guidance equipment on both ends. Runways with one precision end and any other type of end can install the full set of touchdown zones, even if some are past the midpoint. Runways with precision markings on both ends omit touchdown zones within 900 ft (274 m) of the midpoint, to avoid ambiguity over the end with which the zone is associated.

Lighting

 
A runway landing light from 1945

A line of lights on an airfield or elsewhere to guide aircraft in taking off or coming in to land or an illuminated runway is sometimes also known as a flare path.

Technical specifications

 
Night runway view from A320 cockpit
 
Ground light at Bremen Airport

Runway lighting are used at airports for use at night and low visibility. Seen from the air, runway lights form an outline of the runway. A runway may have some or all of the following:[29]

  • Runway end identifier lights (REIL) – unidirectional (facing approach direction) or omnidirectional pair of synchronized flashing lights installed at the runway threshold, one on each side.
  • Runway end lights – a pair of four lights on each side of the runway on precision instrument runways, these lights extend along the full width of the runway. These lights show green when viewed by approaching aircraft and red when seen from the runway.
  • Runway edge lights – white elevated lights that run the length of the runway on either side. On precision instrument runways, the edge-lighting becomes amber in the last 2,000 ft (610 m) of the runway, or last third of the runway, whichever is less. Taxiways are differentiated by being bordered by blue lights, or by having green center lights, depending on the width of the taxiway, and the complexity of the taxi pattern.
  • Runway centerline lighting system (RCLS) – lights embedded into the surface of the runway at 50 ft (15 m) intervals along the runway centerline on some precision instrument runways. White except the last 900 m (3,000 ft): alternate white and red for next 600 m (1,969 ft) and red for last 300 m (984 ft).[29]
  • Touchdown zone lights (TDZL[17]) – rows of white light bars (with three in each row) at 30 or 60 m (98 or 197 ft) intervals on either side of the centerline for 900 m (3,000 ft).[29]
  • Taxiway centerline lead-off lights – installed along lead-off markings, alternate green and yellow lights embedded into the runway pavement. It starts with green light at about the runway centerline to the position of first centerline light beyond the Hold-Short markings on the taxiway.
  • Taxiway centerline lead-on lights – installed the same way as taxiway centerline lead-off Lights, but directing airplane traffic in the opposite direction.
  • Land and hold short lights – a row of white pulsating lights installed across the runway to indicate hold short position on some runways that are facilitating land and hold short operations (LAHSO).[29]
  • Approach lighting system (ALS) – a lighting system installed on the approach end of an airport runway and consists of a series of lightbars, strobe lights, or a combination of the two that extends outward from the runway end.

According to Transport Canada's regulations,[30] the runway-edge lighting must be visible for at least 2 mi (3 km). Additionally, a new system of advisory lighting, runway status lights, is currently being tested in the United States.[31]

The edge lights must be arranged such that:

  • the minimum distance between lines is 75 ft (23 m), and maximum is 200 ft (61 m)
  • the maximum distance between lights within each line is 200 ft (61 m)
  • the minimum length of parallel lines is 1,400 ft (427 m)
  • the minimum number of lights in the line is 8.[32]

Control of lighting system

Typically the lights are controlled by a control tower, a flight service station or another designated authority. Some airports/airfields (particularly uncontrolled ones) are equipped with pilot-controlled lighting, so that pilots can temporarily turn on the lights when the relevant authority is not available.[33] This avoids the need for automatic systems or staff to turn the lights on at night or in other low visibility situations. This also avoids the cost of having the lighting system on for extended periods. Smaller airports may not have lighted runways or runway markings. Particularly at private airfields for light planes, there may be nothing more than a windsock beside a landing strip.

Safety

Types of runway safety incidents include:

Surface

 
Runway surface at Congonhas Airport in São Paulo, Brazil. The grooves increase friction and reduce the risk of hydroplaning.

The choice of material used to construct the runway depends on the use and the local ground conditions. For a major airport, where the ground conditions permit, the most satisfactory type of pavement for long-term minimum maintenance is concrete. Although certain airports have used reinforcement in concrete pavements, this is generally found to be unnecessary, with the exception of expansion joints across the runway where a dowel assembly, which permits relative movement of the concrete slabs, is placed in the concrete. Where it can be anticipated that major settlements of the runway will occur over the years because of unstable ground conditions, it is preferable to install asphalt concrete surface, as it is easier to patch on a periodic basis. Fields with very low traffic of light planes may use a sod surface. Some runways make use of salt flats.

For pavement designs, borings are taken to determine the subgrade condition, and based on the relative bearing capacity of the subgrade, the specifications are established. For heavy-duty commercial aircraft, the pavement thickness, no matter what the top surface, varies from 10 to 48 in (25 to 122 cm), including subgrade.

Airport pavements have been designed by two methods. The first, Westergaard, is based on the assumption that the pavement is an elastic plate supported on a heavy fluid base with a uniform reaction coefficient known as the K value. Experience has shown that the K values on which the formula was developed are not applicable for newer aircraft with very large footprint pressures.

The second method is called the California bearing ratio and was developed in the late 1940s. It is an extrapolation of the original test results, which are not applicable to modern aircraft pavements or to modern aircraft landing gear. Some designs were made by a mixture of these two design theories. A more recent method is an analytical system based on the introduction of vehicle response as an important design parameter. Essentially it takes into account all factors, including the traffic conditions, service life, materials used in the construction, and, especially important, the dynamic response of the vehicles using the landing area.

Because airport pavement construction is so expensive, manufacturers aim to minimize aircraft stresses on the pavement. Manufacturers of the larger planes design landing gear so that the weight of the plane is supported on larger and more numerous tires. Attention is also paid to the characteristics of the landing gear itself, so that adverse effects on the pavement are minimized. Sometimes it is possible to reinforce a pavement for higher loading by applying an overlay of asphaltic concrete or portland cement concrete that is bonded to the original slab. Post-tensioning concrete has been developed for the runway surface. This permits the use of thinner pavements and should result in longer concrete pavement life. Because of the susceptibility of thinner pavements to frost heave, this process is generally applicable only where there is no appreciable frost action.

Pavement surface

Runway pavement surface is prepared and maintained to maximize friction for wheel braking. To minimize hydroplaning following heavy rain, the pavement surface is usually grooved so that the surface water film flows into the grooves and the peaks between grooves will still be in contact with the aircraft tires. To maintain the macrotexturing built into the runway by the grooves, maintenance crews engage in airfield rubber removal or hydrocleaning in order to meet required FAA friction levels.

Pavement subsurface drainage and underdrains

Subsurface underdrains help provide extended life and excellent and reliable pavement performance. At the Hartsfield Atlanta, GA airport the underdrains usually consist of trenches 18 in (46 cm) wide and 48 in (120 cm) deep from the top of the pavement. A perforated plastic tube (5.9 in (15 cm) in diameter) is placed at the bottom of the ditch. The ditches are filled with gravel size crushed stone.[34] Excessive moisture under a concrete pavement can cause pumping, cracking, and joint failure.[35]

Surface type codes

 
The grass airstrip on the Badminton estate, Badminton, South Gloucestershire, England. The strip is very simple: no lighting, no centerline, and no approach aids. The edge is marked by simple posts.

In aviation charts, the surface type is usually abbreviated to a three-letter code.

The most common hard surface types are asphalt and concrete. The most common soft surface types are grass and gravel.

Abbreviation Meaning
ASP Asphalt
BIT Bituminous asphalt or tarmac
BRI Bricks (no longer in use, covered with asphalt or concrete now)
CLA Clay
COM Composite
CON Concrete
COP Composite
COR Coral (fine crushed coral reef structures)
GRE Graded or rolled earth, grass on graded earth
GRS Grass or earth not graded or rolled
GVL Gravel
ICE Ice
LAT Laterite
MAC Macadam
PEM Partially concrete, asphalt or bitumen-bound macadam
PER Permanent surface, details unknown
PSP Marston Matting (derived from pierced/perforated steel planking)
SAN Sand
SMT Sommerfeld Tracking
SNO Snow
U Unknown surface
WAT Water

Length

A runway of at least 1,800 m (5,900 ft) in length is usually adequate for aircraft weights below approximately 100,000 kg (220,000 lb). Larger aircraft including widebodies will usually require at least 2,400 m (7,900 ft) at sea level. International widebody flights, which carry substantial amounts of fuel and are therefore heavier, may also have landing requirements of 3,200 m (10,500 ft) or more and takeoff requirements of 4,000 m (13,000 ft). The Boeing 747 is considered to have the longest takeoff distance of the more common aircraft types and has set the standard for runway lengths of larger international airports.[36]

At sea level, 3,200 m (10,500 ft) can be considered an adequate length to land virtually any aircraft. For example, at O'Hare International Airport, when landing simultaneously on 4L/22R and 10/28 or parallel 9R/27L, it is routine for arrivals from East Asia, which would normally be vectored for 4L/22R (2,300 m (7,546 ft)) or 9R/27L (2,400 m (7,874 ft)) to request 28R (4,000 m (13,123 ft)). It is always accommodated, although occasionally with a delay. Another example is that the Luleå Airport in Sweden was extended to 3,500 m (11,483 ft) to allow any fully loaded freight aircraft to take off. These distances are also influenced by the runway grade (slope) such that, for example, each 1 percent of runway down slope increases the landing distance by 10 percent.[37]

An aircraft taking off at a higher altitude must do so at reduced weight due to decreased density of air at higher altitudes, which reduces engine power and wing lift. An aircraft must also take off at a reduced weight in hotter or more humid conditions (see density altitude). Most commercial aircraft carry manufacturer's tables showing the adjustments required for a given temperature.

In India, recommendations of International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) are now followed more often. For landing, only altitude correction is done for runway length whereas for take-off, all types of correction are taken into consideration.[38]

See also

References

  1. ^ International standards and recommended practices. Aerodromes. Annex 14 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation. ICAO. 1951. p. 17.
  2. ^ Aviation's Crazy, Mixed Up Units of Measure - AeroSavvy
  3. ^ Rupa Haria (Jan 10, 2018). . Aviation Week Network. Archived from the original on April 16, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2018.
  4. ^ "Enviroware - Blog". www.enviroware.com. Retrieved 2012-02-24.
  5. ^ "Airport - when and why was runway 07/25 at Kai Tak removed?".
  6. ^ Federal Aviation Administration Aeronautical Information Manual, Chapter 2, Section 3 Airport Marking Aids and Signs part 3b 2012-01-18 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Chapter 2.3.e.(2)". FAA Advisory Circular AC 150/5340-1L - Standards for Airport Markings. p. 17. A single-digit runway landing designation number is never preceded by a zero.
  8. ^ "New assault landing strip opens in Wyoming; McChord C-17 makes first landing".
  9. ^ "Duke Field (Eglin AF Aux Nr 3) Airport". Airnav.com. July 16, 2020. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  10. ^ "Dobbins Air Reserve Base". Airnav.com. July 16, 2020. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  11. ^ "Ketchikan Harbor Seaplane Base". Airnav.com. July 16, 2020. Retrieved August 8, 2020.
  12. ^ a b c FAA AC 150/5200-35
  13. ^ "Pebbly Beach Seaplane Base". Airnav.com. July 16, 2020. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  14. ^ "Daniel K Inouye International Airport". Airnav.com. July 16, 2020. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  15. ^ Jeppesen Airport Chart Legend
  16. ^ Edwards AFB Rogers Lakebed Airport Diagram (PDF), effective 23 Mar 2023. Federal Aviation Administration.
  17. ^ a b c d e "Order JO 7340.1Z: Contractions" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. March 15, 2007.
  18. ^ a b c d ICAO Annex 14, Aerodrome Design and Operations Vol 1. ICAO. 2016. pp. Chapter 1-Definitions, Chapter 2.8-declared distances, Attachment A section 3. ISBN 978-92-9258-031-5.
  19. ^ a b c Airplanes: Turbine engine powered: Takeoff limitations, retrieved 2009-10-04
  20. ^ Airplanes: Turbine engine powered: Landing limitations: Destination airports, retrieved 2009-10-04
  21. ^ Swatton, Peter J. (2000). Aircraft Performance Theory for Pilots (illustrated, reprint ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom: Blackwell Science Ltd. p. vii. ISBN 0632055693.
  22. ^ FAA AC 150/5340-1L – Standards for Airport Markings pages 13 and following
  23. ^ (PDF) http://128.173.204.63/courses/cee4674/cee4674_pub/markings_airports_rev.pdf. Retrieved 2013-07-10. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  24. ^ a b "AC 150/5300-13B - Airport Design". Retrieved 15 April 2023. FAA Advisory Circular 150/5300-13B
  25. ^ Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge FAA-H-8083-25A, p. 306
  26. ^ US Federal Aviation Regulations, FAR Part 1, Definitions and abbreviations
  27. ^ FAA-H-8083-23, Seaplane, Skiplane, and Float/Ski Equipped Helicopter Operations Handbook (Chapters 1–3)
  28. ^ CAP637, Visual aids handbook, chapter 2, page 3, Issue 2, May 2007, Civil Aviation Authority
  29. ^ a b c d (PDF) (3 ed.). July 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-23.
  30. ^ . TP 14371: Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual. Archived from the original on 2013-03-22.
  31. ^ , archived from the original on 2011-06-06, retrieved 2010-05-14
  32. ^ Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual 2008-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ . TP 14371: Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual. Archived from the original on 2013-03-22.
  34. ^ [1] Design, Construction and Maintenance of Concrete Pavements at the | World's Busiest Airport | W. Charles Greer, Jr., P.E. | AMEC Environment & Infrastructure, Inc., Alpharetta, GA, USA | Subash Reddy Kuchikulla | Materials Managers and Engineers, Inc., Atlanta, GA, USA | Kathryn Masters, P.E. | Hartsfield | Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Atlanta, GA, USA | John Rone, P.E. | Hartsfield | Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Atlanta, GA
  35. ^ [2] Minnesota | Dept. of Transportation| Pavement Manual | 5-4.02 Subsurface Drainage
  36. ^ baer, jeff (2020-11-24). "Airport Runways - Requirements and Regulations". Air Planning. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  37. ^ FSF ALAR Briefing Note 8.3 -- Landing Distances (PDF). Flight Safety Foundation. 2000. (PDF) from the original on 2022-01-20. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
  38. ^ "Runway Incursion and Airport Design - SKYbrary Aviation Safety". www.skybrary.aero. Retrieved 2020-01-01.
  39. ^ Bogie

External links

  • World Airport and Runway Map (ICAO official site)
  • United States Aeronautical Information Manual – Federal Aviation Administration (published yearly)
  • United States Airport/Facility Directory (d-AFD) – Federal Aviation Administration (published every 56 days)
  • United States Terminal Procedures Publication/Airport Diagrams (d-TPP) – Federal Aviation Administration (published every 28 days)
  • North American Powered Parachute Federation
  • Visual Aids Handbook – Civil Aviation Authority

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This article is about the aircraft takeoff and landing area For other uses see Runway disambiguation Landing strip redirects here For the pubic hairstyle see Bikini waxing Not to be confused with Roll way According to the International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO a runway is a defined rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and takeoff of aircraft 1 Runways may be a man made surface often asphalt concrete or a mixture of both or a natural surface grass dirt gravel ice sand or salt Runways taxiways and ramps are sometimes referred to as tarmac though very few runways are built using tarmac Takeoff and landing areas defined on the surface of water for seaplanes are generally referred to as waterways Runway lengths are now commonly given in meters worldwide except in North America where feet are commonly used 2 Runway 13R at Palm Springs International Airport Runway 34 at Nagoya Airfield An MD 11 at one end of a runway Contents 1 History 2 Headings 2 1 Naming 2 2 Letter suffix 2 3 Renumbering 3 Declared distances 4 Sections 5 Markings 5 1 National variants 6 Lighting 6 1 Technical specifications 6 2 Control of lighting system 7 Safety 8 Surface 8 1 Pavement surface 8 2 Pavement subsurface drainage and underdrains 8 3 Surface type codes 9 Length 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditIn 1916 in a World War I war effort context the first concrete paved runway was built in Clermont Ferrand in France allowing local company Michelin to manufacture Breguet Aviation military aircraft citation needed In January 1919 aviation pioneer Orville Wright underlined the need for distinctly marked and carefully prepared landing places but the preparing of the surface of reasonably flat ground is an expensive undertaking and there would also be a continuous expense for the upkeep 3 Headings EditFor fixed wing aircraft it is advantageous to perform takeoffs and landings into the wind to reduce takeoff or landing roll and reduce the ground speed needed to attain flying speed Larger airports usually have several runways in different directions so that one can be selected that is most nearly aligned with the wind Airports with one runway are often constructed to be aligned with the prevailing wind Compiling a wind rose is in fact one of the preliminary steps taken in constructing airport runways 4 Wind direction is given as the direction the wind is coming from a plane taking off from runway 09 faces east into an east wind blowing from 090 Triangular runway pattern at Armitage Field Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake Originally in the 1920s and 1930s airports and air bases particularly in the United Kingdom were built in a triangle like pattern of three runways at 60 angles to each other The reason was that back then aviation was only starting and as a result although it was known that winds affect runway distance required etc not much was known about wind behaviour As a result three runways in a triangle like pattern were built and the runway with the heaviest traffic on it would eventually expand into an airport s main runway while the other two runways would be either abandoned or converted into taxiways 5 For example Bristol Airport has only one runway 09 27 9 27 and two taxiways that form a V which may have been runways on the original 1930s RAF Lulsgate Bottom airbase citation needed Naming Edit Runway 22 Font and size of numbers and letters Runways are named by a number between 01 and 36 which is generally the magnetic azimuth of the runway s heading in decadegrees This heading differs from true north by the local magnetic declination A runway numbered 09 points east 90 runway 18 is south 180 runway 27 points west 270 and runway 36 points to the north 360 rather than 0 6 When taking off from or landing on runway 09 a plane is heading around 90 east A runway can normally be used in both directions and is named for each direction separately e g runway 15 in one direction is runway 33 when used in the other The two numbers differ by 18 180 For clarity in radio communications each digit in the runway name is pronounced individually runway one five runway three three etc instead of fifteen or thirty three FAA airport diagram at O Hare International Airport The two 14 32 runways go from upper left to lower right the two 4 22 runways go from lower left to upper right and the two 9 27 and three 10 28 runways are horizontal A leading zero for example in runway zero six or runway zero one left is included for all ICAO and some U S military airports such as Edwards Air Force Base However most U S civil aviation airports drop the leading zero as required by FAA regulation 7 This also includes some military airfields such as Cairns Army Airfield This American anomaly may lead to inconsistencies in conversations between American pilots and controllers in other countries It is very common in a country such as Canada for a controller to clear an incoming American aircraft to for example runway 04 and the pilot read back the clearance as runway 4 In flight simulation programs those of American origin might apply U S usage to airports around the world For example runway 05 at Halifax will appear on the program as the single digit 5 rather than 05 Military airbases may include smaller paved runways known as assault strips for practice and training next to larger primary runways 8 These strips eschew the standard numerical naming convention and instead employ the runway s full three digit heading examples include Dobbins Air Reserve Base s Runway 110 290 and Duke Field s Runway 180 360 9 10 Runways with non hard surfaces such as small turf airfields and waterways for seaplanes may use the standard numerical scheme or may use traditional compass point naming examples include Ketchikan Harbor Seaplane Base s Waterway E W 11 12 Airports with unpredictable or chaotic water currents such as Santa Catalina Island s Pebbly Beach Seaplane Base may designate their landing area as Waterway ALL WAY to denote the lack of designated landing direction 13 12 Letter suffix Edit Runway sign at Madrid Barajas Airport Spain If there is more than one runway pointing in the same direction parallel runways each runway is identified by appending left L center C and right R to the end of the runway number to identify its position when facing its direction for example runways one five left 15L one five center 15C and one five right 15R Runway zero three left 03L becomes runway two one right 21R when used in the opposite direction derived from adding 18 to the original number for the 180 difference when approaching from the opposite direction In some countries regulations mandate that where parallel runways are too close to each other only one may be used at a time under certain conditions usually adverse weather At large airports with four or more parallel runways for example at Chicago O Hare Los Angeles Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta Denver Dallas Fort Worth and Orlando some runway identifiers are shifted by 1 to avoid the ambiguity that would result with more than three parallel runways For example in Los Angeles this system results in runways 6L 6R 7L and 7R even though all four runways are actually parallel at approximately 69 At Dallas Fort Worth International Airport there are five parallel runways named 17L 17C 17R 18L and 18R all oriented at a heading of 175 4 Occasionally an airport with only three parallel runways may use different runway identifiers such as when a third parallel runway was opened at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in 2000 to the south of existing 8R 26L rather than confusingly becoming the new 8R 26L it was instead designated 7R 25L with the former 8R 26L becoming 7L 25R and 8L 26R becoming 8 26 Suffixes may also be used to denote special use runways Airports that have seaplane waterways may choose to denote the waterway on charts with the suffix W such as Daniel K Inouye International Airport in Honolulu and Lake Hood Seaplane Base in Anchorage 14 Small airports that host various forms of air traffic may employ additional suffixes to denote special runway types based on the type of aircraft expected to use them including STOL aircraft S gliders G rotorcraft H and ultralights U 12 Runways that are numbered relative to true north rather than magnetic north will use the suffix T this is advantageous for certain airfields in the far north such as Thule Air Base 15 Renumbering Edit Runway designations may change over time because Earth s magnetic lines slowly drift on the surface and the magnetic direction changes Depending on the airport location and how much drift occurs it may be necessary to change the runway designation As runways are designated with headings rounded to the nearest 10 this affects some runways sooner than others For example if the magnetic heading of a runway is 233 it is designated Runway 23 If the magnetic heading changes downwards by 5 degrees to 228 the runway remains Runway 23 If on the other hand the original magnetic heading was 226 Runway 23 and the heading decreased by only 2 degrees to 224 the runway becomes Runway 22 Because magnetic drift itself is slow runway designation changes are uncommon and not welcomed as they require an accompanying change in aeronautical charts and descriptive documents When a runway designation does change especially at major airports it is often done at night because taxiway signs need to be changed and the numbers at each end of the runway need to be repainted to the new runway designators In July 2009 for example London Stansted Airport in the United Kingdom changed its runway designations from 05 23 to 04 22 during the night Declared distances EditRunway dimensions vary from as small as 245 m 804 ft long and 8 m 26 ft wide in smaller general aviation airports to 5 500 m 18 045 ft long and 80 m 262 ft wide at large international airports built to accommodate the largest jets to the huge 11 917 m 274 m 39 098 ft 899 ft lake bed runway 17 35 at Edwards Air Force Base in California developed as a landing site for the Space Shuttle 16 Takeoff and landing distances available are given using one of the following terms Takeoff Run Available TORA 17 18 The length of runway declared available and suitable for the ground run of an airplane taking off 19 Takeoff Distance Available TODA 17 18 The length of the takeoff run available plus the length of the clearway if clearway is provided 19 The clearway length allowed must lie within the aerodrome or airport boundary According to the Federal Aviation Regulations and Joint Aviation Requirements JAR TODA is the lesser of TORA plus clearway or 1 5 times TORA Accelerate Stop Distance Available ASDA 17 18 The length of the takeoff run available plus the length of the stopway if stopway is provided 19 Landing Distance Available LDA 17 18 The length of runway that is declared available and suitable for the ground run of an airplane landing 20 Emergency Distance Available EMDA 21 LDA or TORA plus a stopway Sections EditThere are standards for runway markings 22 The runway thresholds are markings across the runway that denote the beginning and end of the designated space for landing and takeoff under non emergency conditions 23 The runway safety area is the cleared smoothed and graded area around the paved runway It is kept free from any obstacles that might impede flight or ground roll of aircraft The runway is the surface from threshold to threshold including displaced thresholds which typically features threshold markings numbers and centerlines but excludes blast pads and stopways at both ends Blast pads are often constructed just before the start of a runway where jet blast produced by large planes during the takeoff roll could otherwise erode the ground and eventually damage the runway Stopways also known as overrun areas are also constructed at the end of runways as emergency space to stop planes that overrun the runway on landing or a rejected takeoff Blast pads and stopways look similar and are both marked with yellow chevrons stopways may optionally be surrounded by red runway lights The differences are that stopways can support the full weight of an aircraft and are designated for use in an aborted takeoff while blast pads are often not as strong as the main paved surface of the runway and are not to be used for taxiing landing or aborted takeoffs 24 An engineered materials arrestor system EMAS may also be present which may overlap with the end of the blast pad or stopway and is painted similarly although an EMAS does not count as part of a stopway 24 Displaced thresholds may be used for taxiing takeoff and landing rollout but not for touchdown A displaced threshold often exists because of obstacles just before the runway runway strength or noise restrictions making the beginning section of runway unsuitable for landings 25 It is marked with white paint arrows that lead up to the beginning of the landing portion of the runway As with blast pads landings on displaced thresholds are not permitted aside from emergency use or exigent circumstance Clearway is an area beyond the paved runway aligned with the runway centerline and under the control of the airport authorities This area is not less than 500 ft and there are no protruding obstacles except for threshold lights provided they aren t higher than 26 inches There is a limit on the upslope of the clearway of 1 25 The length of the clearway may be included in the length of the takeoff distance available 26 For example if a paved runway is 2 000 metres 6 600 ft long and there are 400 metres 1 300 ft of clearway beyond the end of the runway the takeoff distance available is 2 400 metres 7 900 ft long When the runway is to be used for takeoff of a large airplane the maximum permissible takeoff weight of the airplane can be based on the takeoff distance available including clearway Clearway allows large airplanes to take off at a heavier weight than would be allowed if only the length of the paved runway is taken into account Markings EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are runway markings and signs on most large runways Larger runways have a distance remaining sign black box with white numbers This sign uses a single number to indicate the remaining distance of the runway in thousands of feet For example a 7 will indicate 7 000 ft 2 134 m remaining The runway threshold is marked by a line of green lights Runway Identifying numbers being painted at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport KBJC There are three types of runways Visual runways are used at small airstrips and are usually just a strip of grass gravel ice asphalt or concrete Although there are usually no markings on a visual runway they may have threshold markings designators and centerlines Additionally they do not provide an instrument based landing procedure pilots must be able to see the runway to use it Also radio communication may not be available and pilots must be self reliant Non precision instrument runways are often used at small to medium size airports These runways depending on the surface may be marked with threshold markings designators centerlines and sometimes a 1 000 ft 305 m mark known as an aiming point sometimes installed at 1 500 ft 457 m While centerlines provide horizontal position guidance aiming point markers provide vertical position guidance to planes on visual approach Precision instrument runways which are found at medium and large size airports consist of a blast pad stopway optional for airports handling jets threshold designator centerline aiming point and 500 ft 152 m 1 000 ft 305 m 1 500 ft 457 m 2 000 ft 610 m 2 500 ft 762 m and 3 000 ft 914 m touchdown zone marks Precision runways provide both horizontal and vertical guidance for instrument approaches Waterways may be unmarked or marked with buoys that follow maritime notation instead 27 National variants Edit In Australia Canada the United Kingdom 28 as well as some other countries or territories Hong Kong and Macau all 3 stripe and 2 stripe touchdown zones for precision runways are replaced with one stripe touchdown zones In some South American countries like Colombia Ecuador and Peru one 3 stripe is added and a 2 stripe is replaced with the aiming point Some European countries replace the aiming point with a 3 stripe touchdown zone Runways in Norway have yellow markings instead of the usual white ones This also occurs in some airports in Japan Sweden and Finland The yellow markings are used to ensure better contrast against snow Runways may have different types of equipment on each end To reduce costs many airports do not install precision guidance equipment on both ends Runways with one precision end and any other type of end can install the full set of touchdown zones even if some are past the midpoint Runways with precision markings on both ends omit touchdown zones within 900 ft 274 m of the midpoint to avoid ambiguity over the end with which the zone is associated Lighting Edit A runway landing light from 1945 A line of lights on an airfield or elsewhere to guide aircraft in taking off or coming in to land or an illuminated runway is sometimes also known as a flare path Technical specifications Edit Night runway view from A320 cockpit Ground light at Bremen Airport Runway lighting are used at airports for use at night and low visibility Seen from the air runway lights form an outline of the runway A runway may have some or all of the following 29 Runway end identifier lights REIL unidirectional facing approach direction or omnidirectional pair of synchronized flashing lights installed at the runway threshold one on each side Runway end lights a pair of four lights on each side of the runway on precision instrument runways these lights extend along the full width of the runway These lights show green when viewed by approaching aircraft and red when seen from the runway Runway edge lights white elevated lights that run the length of the runway on either side On precision instrument runways the edge lighting becomes amber in the last 2 000 ft 610 m of the runway or last third of the runway whichever is less Taxiways are differentiated by being bordered by blue lights or by having green center lights depending on the width of the taxiway and the complexity of the taxi pattern Runway centerline lighting system RCLS lights embedded into the surface of the runway at 50 ft 15 m intervals along the runway centerline on some precision instrument runways White except the last 900 m 3 000 ft alternate white and red for next 600 m 1 969 ft and red for last 300 m 984 ft 29 Touchdown zone lights TDZL 17 rows of white light bars with three in each row at 30 or 60 m 98 or 197 ft intervals on either side of the centerline for 900 m 3 000 ft 29 Taxiway centerline lead off lights installed along lead off markings alternate green and yellow lights embedded into the runway pavement It starts with green light at about the runway centerline to the position of first centerline light beyond the Hold Short markings on the taxiway Taxiway centerline lead on lights installed the same way as taxiway centerline lead off Lights but directing airplane traffic in the opposite direction Land and hold short lights a row of white pulsating lights installed across the runway to indicate hold short position on some runways that are facilitating land and hold short operations LAHSO 29 Approach lighting system ALS a lighting system installed on the approach end of an airport runway and consists of a series of lightbars strobe lights or a combination of the two that extends outward from the runway end According to Transport Canada s regulations 30 the runway edge lighting must be visible for at least 2 mi 3 km Additionally a new system of advisory lighting runway status lights is currently being tested in the United States 31 The edge lights must be arranged such that the minimum distance between lines is 75 ft 23 m and maximum is 200 ft 61 m the maximum distance between lights within each line is 200 ft 61 m the minimum length of parallel lines is 1 400 ft 427 m the minimum number of lights in the line is 8 32 Approach lighting system at Berlin Tegel Airport Control of lighting system Edit Typically the lights are controlled by a control tower a flight service station or another designated authority Some airports airfields particularly uncontrolled ones are equipped with pilot controlled lighting so that pilots can temporarily turn on the lights when the relevant authority is not available 33 This avoids the need for automatic systems or staff to turn the lights on at night or in other low visibility situations This also avoids the cost of having the lighting system on for extended periods Smaller airports may not have lighted runways or runway markings Particularly at private airfields for light planes there may be nothing more than a windsock beside a landing strip Safety EditMain article Runway safety Types of runway safety incidents include Runway excursion an incident involving only a single aircraft where it makes an inappropriate exit from the runway e g Thai Airways Flight 679 Runway overrun also known as an overshoot a type of excursion where the aircraft is unable to stop before the end of the runway e g Air France Flight 358 TAM Airlines Flight 3054 Air India Express Flight 812 Runway incursion an incident involving incorrect presence of a vehicle person or another aircraft on the runway e g Aeroflot Flight 3352 Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686 Runway confusion an aircraft makes use of the wrong runway for landing or takeoff e g Singapore Airlines Flight 006 Western Airlines Flight 2605 Runway undershoot an aircraft that lands short of the runway e g British Airways Flight 38 Asiana Airlines Flight 214 Surface EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Runway surface at Congonhas Airport in Sao Paulo Brazil The grooves increase friction and reduce the risk of hydroplaning The choice of material used to construct the runway depends on the use and the local ground conditions For a major airport where the ground conditions permit the most satisfactory type of pavement for long term minimum maintenance is concrete Although certain airports have used reinforcement in concrete pavements this is generally found to be unnecessary with the exception of expansion joints across the runway where a dowel assembly which permits relative movement of the concrete slabs is placed in the concrete Where it can be anticipated that major settlements of the runway will occur over the years because of unstable ground conditions it is preferable to install asphalt concrete surface as it is easier to patch on a periodic basis Fields with very low traffic of light planes may use a sod surface Some runways make use of salt flats For pavement designs borings are taken to determine the subgrade condition and based on the relative bearing capacity of the subgrade the specifications are established For heavy duty commercial aircraft the pavement thickness no matter what the top surface varies from 10 to 48 in 25 to 122 cm including subgrade Airport pavements have been designed by two methods The first Westergaard is based on the assumption that the pavement is an elastic plate supported on a heavy fluid base with a uniform reaction coefficient known as the K value Experience has shown that the K values on which the formula was developed are not applicable for newer aircraft with very large footprint pressures The second method is called the California bearing ratio and was developed in the late 1940s It is an extrapolation of the original test results which are not applicable to modern aircraft pavements or to modern aircraft landing gear Some designs were made by a mixture of these two design theories A more recent method is an analytical system based on the introduction of vehicle response as an important design parameter Essentially it takes into account all factors including the traffic conditions service life materials used in the construction and especially important the dynamic response of the vehicles using the landing area Because airport pavement construction is so expensive manufacturers aim to minimize aircraft stresses on the pavement Manufacturers of the larger planes design landing gear so that the weight of the plane is supported on larger and more numerous tires Attention is also paid to the characteristics of the landing gear itself so that adverse effects on the pavement are minimized Sometimes it is possible to reinforce a pavement for higher loading by applying an overlay of asphaltic concrete or portland cement concrete that is bonded to the original slab Post tensioning concrete has been developed for the runway surface This permits the use of thinner pavements and should result in longer concrete pavement life Because of the susceptibility of thinner pavements to frost heave this process is generally applicable only where there is no appreciable frost action Pavement surface Edit A Mahan Air Airbus A310 using reverse thrust in rainy weather at Dusseldorf Airport Runway pavement surface is prepared and maintained to maximize friction for wheel braking To minimize hydroplaning following heavy rain the pavement surface is usually grooved so that the surface water film flows into the grooves and the peaks between grooves will still be in contact with the aircraft tires To maintain the macrotexturing built into the runway by the grooves maintenance crews engage in airfield rubber removal or hydrocleaning in order to meet required FAA friction levels Pavement subsurface drainage and underdrains Edit Subsurface underdrains help provide extended life and excellent and reliable pavement performance At the Hartsfield Atlanta GA airport the underdrains usually consist of trenches 18 in 46 cm wide and 48 in 120 cm deep from the top of the pavement A perforated plastic tube 5 9 in 15 cm in diameter is placed at the bottom of the ditch The ditches are filled with gravel size crushed stone 34 Excessive moisture under a concrete pavement can cause pumping cracking and joint failure 35 Surface type codes Edit The grass airstrip on the Badminton estate Badminton South Gloucestershire England The strip is very simple no lighting no centerline and no approach aids The edge is marked by simple posts In aviation charts the surface type is usually abbreviated to a three letter code The most common hard surface types are asphalt and concrete The most common soft surface types are grass and gravel Abbreviation MeaningASP AsphaltBIT Bituminous asphalt or tarmacBRI Bricks no longer in use covered with asphalt or concrete now CLA ClayCOM CompositeCON ConcreteCOP CompositeCOR Coral fine crushed coral reef structures GRE Graded or rolled earth grass on graded earthGRS Grass or earth not graded or rolledGVL GravelICE IceLAT LateriteMAC MacadamPEM Partially concrete asphalt or bitumen bound macadamPER Permanent surface details unknownPSP Marston Matting derived from pierced perforated steel planking SAN SandSMT Sommerfeld TrackingSNO SnowU Unknown surfaceWAT WaterLength EditMain article List of longest runwaysThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A runway of at least 1 800 m 5 900 ft in length is usually adequate for aircraft weights below approximately 100 000 kg 220 000 lb Larger aircraft including widebodies will usually require at least 2 400 m 7 900 ft at sea level International widebody flights which carry substantial amounts of fuel and are therefore heavier may also have landing requirements of 3 200 m 10 500 ft or more and takeoff requirements of 4 000 m 13 000 ft The Boeing 747 is considered to have the longest takeoff distance of the more common aircraft types and has set the standard for runway lengths of larger international airports 36 At sea level 3 200 m 10 500 ft can be considered an adequate length to land virtually any aircraft For example at O Hare International Airport when landing simultaneously on 4L 22R and 10 28 or parallel 9R 27L it is routine for arrivals from East Asia which would normally be vectored for 4L 22R 2 300 m 7 546 ft or 9R 27L 2 400 m 7 874 ft to request 28R 4 000 m 13 123 ft It is always accommodated although occasionally with a delay Another example is that the Lulea Airport in Sweden was extended to 3 500 m 11 483 ft to allow any fully loaded freight aircraft to take off These distances are also influenced by the runway grade slope such that for example each 1 percent of runway down slope increases the landing distance by 10 percent 37 An aircraft taking off at a higher altitude must do so at reduced weight due to decreased density of air at higher altitudes which reduces engine power and wing lift An aircraft must also take off at a reduced weight in hotter or more humid conditions see density altitude Most commercial aircraft carry manufacturer s tables showing the adjustments required for a given temperature In India recommendations of International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO are now followed more often For landing only altitude correction is done for runway length whereas for take off all types of correction are taken into consideration 38 In the 1980s Leeds Bradford International Airport extended its runway to take wide body aircraft by building an overpass over the A658 road source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Road crossing of Shetland A970 with Sumburgh Airport s runway The movable barrier closes when aircraft land or take off Gibraltar International Airport s runway 09 27 crossed by the one road between Gibraltar and Spain A parachute may be used to slow down craft in this case the Space Shuttle Atlantis See also EditEngineered materials arrestor system Helipad Highway strip ICAO recommendations on use of the International System of Units Instrument landing system ILS List of airports Pavement classification number PCN Precision approach path indicator Roll way sometimes referred as a runway 39 Runway visual range Tabletop runway Visual approach slope indicatorReferences Edit International standards and recommended practices Aerodromes Annex 14 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation ICAO 1951 p 17 Aviation s Crazy Mixed Up Units of Measure AeroSavvy Rupa Haria Jan 10 2018 1919 Orville Wright On The Future Of Civil Flying Aviation Week Network Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Retrieved January 10 2018 Enviroware Blog www enviroware com Retrieved 2012 02 24 Airport when and why was runway 07 25 at Kai Tak removed Federal Aviation Administration Aeronautical Information Manual Chapter 2 Section 3 Airport Marking Aids and Signs part 3b Archived 2012 01 18 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 2 3 e 2 FAA Advisory Circular AC 150 5340 1L Standards for Airport Markings p 17 A single digit runway landing designation number is never preceded by a zero New assault landing strip opens in Wyoming McChord C 17 makes first landing Duke Field Eglin AF Aux Nr 3 Airport Airnav com July 16 2020 Retrieved August 5 2020 Dobbins Air Reserve Base Airnav com July 16 2020 Retrieved August 5 2020 Ketchikan Harbor Seaplane Base Airnav com July 16 2020 Retrieved August 8 2020 a b c FAA AC 150 5200 35 Pebbly Beach Seaplane Base Airnav com July 16 2020 Retrieved August 5 2020 Daniel K Inouye International Airport Airnav com July 16 2020 Retrieved August 5 2020 Jeppesen Airport Chart Legend Edwards AFB Rogers Lakebed Airport Diagram PDF effective 23 Mar 2023 Federal Aviation Administration a b c d e Order JO 7340 1Z Contractions PDF Federal Aviation Administration March 15 2007 a b c d ICAO Annex 14 Aerodrome Design and Operations Vol 1 ICAO 2016 pp Chapter 1 Definitions Chapter 2 8 declared distances Attachment A section 3 ISBN 978 92 9258 031 5 a b c Airplanes Turbine engine powered Takeoff limitations retrieved 2009 10 04 Airplanes Turbine engine powered Landing limitations Destination airports retrieved 2009 10 04 Swatton Peter J 2000 Aircraft Performance Theory for Pilots illustrated reprint ed Oxford United Kingdom Blackwell Science Ltd p vii ISBN 0632055693 FAA AC 150 5340 1L Standards for Airport Markings pages 13 and following PDF http 128 173 204 63 courses cee4674 cee4674 pub markings airports rev pdf Retrieved 2013 07 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help dead link a b AC 150 5300 13B Airport Design Retrieved 15 April 2023 FAA Advisory Circular 150 5300 13B Pilot s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge FAA H 8083 25A p 306 US Federal Aviation Regulations FAR Part 1 Definitions and abbreviations FAA H 8083 23 Seaplane Skiplane and Float Ski Equipped Helicopter Operations Handbook Chapters 1 3 CAP637 Visual aids handbook chapter 2 page 3 Issue 2 May 2007 Civil Aviation Authority a b c d Aerodrome Design and Operations PDF 3 ed July 1999 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 23 7 8 Runway Lighting TP 14371 Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual Archived from the original on 2013 03 22 FAA Installs Runway Safety Warning System at LAX archived from the original on 2011 06 06 retrieved 2010 05 14 Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual Archived 2008 06 17 at the Wayback Machine 7 18 Aircraft Radio Control of Aerodrome Lighting TP 14371 Transport Canada Aeronautical Information Manual Archived from the original on 2013 03 22 1 Design Construction and Maintenance of Concrete Pavements at the World s Busiest Airport W Charles Greer Jr P E AMEC Environment amp Infrastructure Inc Alpharetta GA USA Subash Reddy Kuchikulla Materials Managers and Engineers Inc Atlanta GA USA Kathryn Masters P E Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport Atlanta GA USA John Rone P E Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport Atlanta GA 2 Minnesota Dept of Transportation Pavement Manual 5 4 02 Subsurface Drainage baer jeff 2020 11 24 Airport Runways Requirements and Regulations Air Planning Retrieved 2021 11 27 FSF ALAR Briefing Note 8 3 Landing Distances PDF Flight Safety Foundation 2000 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 01 20 Retrieved 2022 01 20 Runway Incursion and Airport Design SKYbrary Aviation Safety www skybrary aero Retrieved 2020 01 01 BogieExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Runway lights Look up runway in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Runway World Airport and Runway Map ICAO official site United States Aeronautical Information Manual Federal Aviation Administration published yearly United States Airport Facility Directory d AFD Federal Aviation Administration published every 56 days United States Terminal Procedures Publication Airport Diagrams d TPP Federal Aviation Administration published every 28 days North American Powered Parachute Federation Visual Aids Handbook Civil Aviation Authority Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Runway amp oldid 1150004998, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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