Cool! What are the fundamental metrics that this type of software uses? I'm assuming ISA, winds, and user-defined burns? Am I missing anything major?
Is there a quick-and-dirty FF calculation, like 2%/1,000 feet for TAS? I guess I could record what the burns are for a 250KIAS climb using the same thrust throughout my climbs tomorrow.
The Citation uses the JT15D engine which is sort of like the PT6.. it's been around a LONG time. If you go to fltplan.com, you can put in your aircraft with a number of different options. You can load fuel burn/hr and for ours it is about 1200lbs first hour, 1100lbs second hour and about 950lbs for each hour after. We have about 4hrs fuel on board.
Another section allows you to enter at 1000ft increments, climb speed, rate of climb, cruise speed, cruise fuel burn and descent speed. So i just took the template and filled in the numbers using maybe 5-10 flights to average out the numbers.
Once the info is entered, you enter your flt.. for example ATL-ORL. The program spits out your chosen alt enroute plus 4 other altitudes on one page. It gives you about 8 altitudes on another page. The info includes winds, ISA, and headwinds/tailwinds. Oh, and the program allows you to enter your desired routing, gives you the preferred routing and shows you routing others have used. You choose.
In our example, the filed altitude is 350 with data for that along with 390, 330 and 310 as well as the others on another page. Fuel burn is 1570 using entered data and 1767 for hourly burn computations.
There are lots of other functions such as the ability to send faxes to the FBOs with any info you want to send; time of arrival, special catering needs, GPU, etc.
And for pilots here is the selling point... IT IS FREE! for the pilots. The FBOs and others pay to be on the page but for the pilot, it is FREE. I use it for the jet and for my Swift.
Also, you can download all the charts for a specific airport.
Skyvector.com is another site where you can get lots of info but not flight planning.
AOPA has its flt planning software on line also as does the FAA at
www.faa.gov/pilots/flt_plan/
And for the flt departments there are lots of fee-based outfits. It is amazing that we used to crank out our flt plans for the KC-135 using the spider graphs and an E6B....