Your Next Flight May Land in a Totally Different Way

The thing I miss the most in my flying is listening to Channel 9 air traffic control on United. There’s a certain familiarity to the discussions that’s just soothing.

The usual patter on approach of “descend maintain one two thousand” is going to change though — and at some airports is already changing. (HT: Alan H.)

That’s because more airports are moving to bringing planes in on a steady path to the ground instead of descending, leveling off, and descending again.

Leveling off involves cranking up the engines, which burns fuel. A steady glide to the ground burns less. And it allows descent to begin later, where the new approach pattern has been implemented descents begin a couple miles closer to the airport.

Usually, planes approaching an airport drop altitude in steps, cranking up the engines to level out in between. That makes it easier for pilots to control descents and for air traffic controllers to keep track of everyone and manage spacing between planes. Crews check in with the ground at each interval, making sure they’re clear to drop a few thousand more feet. It’s a safe but inefficient way to get lots of planes on the ground.

Now, planes flying into George Bush Intercontinental and William P. Hobby airports in Houston will follow “optimized profile descents.” Instead of descending in stages, they will steadily drop, keeping the throttle near idle for nearly 100 miles. It’s like sliding down the bannister instead of using the stairs. Less throttle means less wasted fuel and less noise for airport neighbors. Reducing check-ins with ground control reduces opportunities for miscommunication.

Here’s a video showing changes in Houston.

These changes are coming to North Texas, Northern and Southern California, Atlanta, and Charlotte. Each project costs $5 million to $9 million.

On average changes may save about four gallons of fuel per flight, which adds up to millions of dollars a year.


About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. Did anyone else see the headline and think of Denzel Washington in the movie “Flight”? THAT is a totally different way of landing!

  2. If the airlines save $1mm per airport, will the airlines be funding the investment?

  3. Who pays for this? The airlines are the ones getting the savings, somehow I doubt they all pool $5 to $9 million per airport.

  4. Can’t wait to test this at IAH on Friday. With faster altitude drop my ears will hurt even more. It must be a ploy of ibuprofen manufacturers.

  5. The old way: “makes it easier for pilots to control descents and for air traffic controllers to keep track of everyone and manage spacing between planes. It’s a safe but inefficient way to get lots of planes on the ground.” Does that make the new way harder for pilots to descend and harder for air traffic controllers to keep track off and space planes? Is it an unsafe but efficient way to land planes?

  6. Ch 9 rocks yesterday on my lhr-ewr flight the pilot actually called to control while over Canada to inquire about the football score Belgium USA , they checked and relayed the results to the pilot and any of us on channel

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