Fly-Til-I-Die24-7
New Member
So for the CFI-I's out there, how much fuel required should you factor into fuel requirments for the terminal and approach phase of an IFR cross country flight. 20 min? 30? 45?
Thanks
Thanks
So for the CFI-I's out there, how much fuel required should you factor into fuel requirments for the terminal and approach phase of an IFR cross country flight. 20 min? 30? 45?
Thanks
I loathe FAR quotes. Will refrain.
You should have enough fuel to fly to your destination, alternate, the approach, and 45 min after. It does not say if your supposed to have that 45 min reserve "before" or "after".
I personally don't like to fall below an hour of reserve.
Case in point: Was ramp checked (really?!) w/ about 15 min of fuel left IFR. Was going to get written up but stated the FAR doesn't specifically state if you need that 45 min of reserve when you land, my earth shattering debate ended with "I had 45 min reserve when I took off!"
**totally read that question wrong**
My bad-Ignore all that jargon
Case in point: Was ramp checked (really?!) w/ about 15 min of fuel left IFR. Was going to get written up but stated the FAR doesn't specifically state if you need that 45 min of reserve when you land, my earth shattering debate ended with "I had 45 min reserve when I took off!"
Glad to hear you weren't violated! That is how I always interpretted the IFR fuel reserve rule as well - ensure prior to departure that you have 45 minutes of reserve, given weather reports and forecasts, etc. Once you launch, if unforecasted weather or ATC issued routing changes force you to dig into that reserve somewhat, it's still legal...that's the reason you carry a reserve. I was always confident that was the spirit of the regulation.
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