First is the 525-passenger Airbus A380, the largest passenger airliner in the world. Compare its maximum takeoff weight of 1,200,000 lb (560,000 kg) to that of the freighters in the previous entry in the series, and the next-largest airliner, the Boeing B747-400.
This airplane's huge weight disparity with everything else has earned it a separate moniker. Whereas we refer to all the other heavy jets as "heavies", the A380 is referred to as a "Super". Examples:
"Qantas 94 Super"Besides the uprated terminology, the A380 also imposes additional separation requirements. Similar to the Heavy wake turbulence spacing requirements, the mileage required behind the Super is determined by the size of the following aircraft. Another Super
"Super Airbus 380"
UPDATE: The wake turbulence spacing behind a Super has been revised to six (6) miles in trail for another Super or a Heavy; seven (7) miles in trail for a Large, and eight (8) miles for a small. See this post for a quick reference.
Mutt and Jeff: the largest and smallest of the airliners at LAX. An Emirates A380, here on a publicity tour, and a United Express (Skywest) E-120 Brasilia.
UPDATE: The following section is now obsolete; the B757, regardless of model or weight, is no longer considered a Heavy. See this entry.
Exception number two: The Boeing 757-200. This particular aircraft is an anomaly (and a pain in the @$ for controllers); it's not a heavy, and yet it has its own wake turbulence requirements. Whereas a Large aircraft behind another Large aircraft requires three (3) miles of spacing, a Large behind a B752 needs four (4) miles. That same Large needs five (5) miles behind a heavy jet. However, it gets even better: As I mentioned early on, the FAA defines any aircraft capable of operating at a weight of more than 255,000 lbs as a Heavy. There is one variant of the B757-200 that has a maximum weight of 255,500 lbs, and thus is a heavy. As far as I know, there is no visible differentiation between a heavy B757 and one that isn't a heavy. The paperwork is the only way to tell the difference. Fortunately for us, only two airlines at LAX operate the "heavy" version; unfortunately, both also have non-heavies. Oh, and there's one other minor detail: A quirk of our flight plan computer keeps the airlines from correctly filing the heavy B752's as "Heavies"; it just won't let them do it. Controllers can put it in as an amendment though, and so the Clearance Delivery controller gets to play a question-and-answer game with all the pilots of the out-going B757-200 flights for US Air and American: "Are you a heavy today?" Sort of like going to McDonald's: "Would you like to supersize today?" It doesn't take much imagination to see the possibility for this system to go awry. There have been cross-country separation errors caused by an aircraft's heavy status being missed at the departure point; a solution is in the works, which I've heard will be effective this spring.
Is it a heavy, or isn't it? In this case, a definite 'yes' for the B762 on the taxiway; and 'maybe, maybe not' for the B752 on the runway: American has both.
The flight crew knows, and hopefully so do we . . .
Is it a heavy, or isn't it? In this case, 'yes' for the gray B763; and 'no' for the white B752.
United doesn't operate heavy B757-200's.
Continental's B752's are not heavies.
Nor are Delta's.
But this one might be: US Air has a few B752's that qualify as heavies.
The flight crew knows, and hopefully so do we . . .
Is it a heavy, or isn't it? In this case, 'yes' for the gray B763; and 'no' for the white B752.
United doesn't operate heavy B757-200's.
Continental's B752's are not heavies.
Nor are Delta's.
But this one might be: US Air has a few B752's that qualify as heavies.
Link to next part: Exceptions addenda
Good grief!
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