I was recently on a flight in Australia, from Adelaide to Melbourne. It was a very hot day , and pretty turbulent during descent. Nothing really rough, just a bit bumpy. It was a very hot day, around 42 degrees Celsius in Adelaide and Melbourne. We flew a downwind leg past YMML, then base and final, and the whole time I was watching to see the flaps go down, but they never went past (I assume) flaps 2 setting, possibly even 1+F, but I would assume 2.
Would this be because a higher landing speed was required due to the heat, or is there some other reason a flaps 2 setting would have been used?
I have flown with the same airline, and others and this was the first such landing I have seen. It is usually a full flaps landing.
Here is a youtube vid I found which pretty much replicates what I saw, from a similar angle, and in what looks like similar weather.
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scotth6
Hi,
I was recently on a flight in Australia, from Adelaide to Melbourne. It was a very hot day , and pretty turbulent during descent. Nothing really rough, just a bit bumpy. It was a very hot day, around 42 degrees Celsius in Adelaide and Melbourne. We flew a downwind leg past YMML, then base and final, and the whole time I was watching to see the flaps go down, but they never went past (I assume) flaps 2 setting, possibly even 1+F, but I would assume 2.
Would this be because a higher landing speed was required due to the heat, or is there some other reason a flaps 2 setting would have been used?
I have flown with the same airline, and others and this was the first such landing I have seen. It is usually a full flaps landing.
Here is a youtube vid I found which pretty much replicates what I saw, from a similar angle, and in what looks like similar weather.
Cheers,
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