Emirates A380 flies 5000 miles on three engines...

Go. Ain't no thing. 4 engine rules are different than twins. It takes some getting used to. You lose one of anything in the past life, it's full on work. Now, "eh, I'll go start a pot of coffee".
What, you think you're BETTER than me?

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Why do you select the TCAS to TA only for a relight? Guessing they didn't certify it to have the performance for a RA climb on three at altitude?

Totally different aircraft but in our Ultra's with TCAS all the engine out/reduced performance emergency checklists have us select "TA Only" as one of the checklist items.
 
Same in the 707... Navy rules allow us to continue the flight to a suitable airport. TA only due to climb performance being affected. Fuel burn, similar on three vs. four engines.

I can definitely see the need to land a twin after losing one, but in a four engine plane it's a non-event.

And, @Dan208B, got a few good chuckles out of the link comments.
 
Totally different aircraft but in our Ultra's with TCAS all the engine out/reduced performance emergency checklists have us select "TA Only" as one of the checklist items.

And on the CRJ that's one of the only time we don't have to follow a TCAS RA. "Performance limited or obvious error"
 
This thread reminds me of this classic aviation joke:

A reader wrote us, retelling the story about the military pilot calling ATC for a priority landing because his single-engine jet fighter was running "a bit peaked." ATC told the fighter jock that he was number two behind a B-52 that had one shut down.

"Ah," the pilot remarked, "the dreaded seven-engine approach!"
 
Why do you select the TCAS to TA only for a relight? Guessing they didn't certify it to have the performance for a RA climb on three at altitude?

Not only that, but most TCAS systems talk to the other TCAS system(s) involved in a potential conflict and decide which way everybody is going to go. The escape logic is based on a maximum performance (all engines operating) climb so if one guy isn't going to get full power but the TCAS system doesn't know that, it could cause problems.
 
Why do you select the TCAS to TA only for a relight? Guessing they didn't certify it to have the performance for a RA climb on three at altitude?

Yeah, that's pretty much SOP on every multi engine TCAS equipped airplane I've flown. Granted that's a grand total of 2 types, so...... :)
 
Yeah, that's pretty much SOP on every multi engine TCAS equipped airplane I've flown. Granted that's a grand total of 2 types, so...... :)
It's been a while since I've flown a TCAS 2-equipped airplane - so I dug out an old manual and sure enough says to select it to TA-only. Interesting.
 
My simple twin engine brain is still wrasslin' with the concept of taking off with an engine inop. ;)

Push up power on the symmetrical good engines, feed in power as airspeed increases on the asymmetric, go fly.
 
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