Chuyến Bay Kiểm Tra Tuyến Đường (Route Proving Flight)
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Definition
Các chuyến bay thử nghiệm được thực hiện trên tuyến đường mới trước khi dịch vụ thương mại bắt đầu để xác minh các quy trình vận hành, tính toán nhiên liệu, sân bay thay thế và tuân thủ quy định.
What Is a Route Proving Flight?
A Route Proving Flight is a series of verification flights conducted by an airline on a new route prior to the commencement of commercial passenger service. These flights simulate operational conditions in order to validate fuel planning, identify suitable diversion airports, verify communication and navigation infrastructure, and confirm that the airline's operations manuals accurately reflect the route's specific challenges. Route proving is required by most aviation authorities as a prerequisite for route approval, particularly for long-haul, overwater, or polar routes.
Route proving flights are distinct from ferry flights: they are conducted under as-close-to-normal operational conditions as possible, often carrying observers, safety pilots, and regulatory authority representatives. The results feed directly into the airline's Route Manual and Operations Specification amendments.
How It Works
The scope of route proving requirements varies by route type and regulatory jurisdiction. The FAA (under FAR Part 121, Subpart T) and EASA (under Air OPS ORO.FC.235) have specific training and checking requirements that route proving satisfies:
- Fuel burn validation: Actual fuel consumption is measured and compared to performance computer predictions. Discrepancies exceeding 1–2% trigger revised fuel planning data.
- ETOPS routes: For ETOPS operations (e.g., 180-minute ETOPS on a transoceanic route), route proving must verify that all alternate airports within the ETOPs radius have the required facilities, including fuel, ILS approaches, and maintenance capability.
- Navigation infrastructure: Pilots verify VHF/HF radio coverage, datalink availability (ACARS/SATCOM), and the accuracy of range and fuel calculations at each flight level.
- Minimum proving flights: EASA typically requires a minimum of 2 proving flights per route pair; FAA requirements depend on the operator's existing route experience.
Key Examples
When Qantas launched its Perth–London non-stop service (QF9/10) in March 2018 using the Boeing 787-9, the airline conducted multiple route proving flights across 2017 to verify fuel calculations for the 14,498 km (7,829 nm) route — then the world's third-longest commercial route. The proving flights established that the aircraft needed to depart with approximately 101,000 kg (222,700 lb) of fuel to ensure MTOW compliance and required diversion fuel to Singapore Changi Airport as a designated alternate.
Aircraft Examples
- Boeing 787-9: Used for the majority of new ultra-long-haul route proving flights due to its ETOPS-330 certification and 14,140 km (7,635 nm) range.
- Airbus A350-900ULR: Singapore Airlines conducted extensive route proving flights before launching SQ22/SQ21 (Singapore–New York, 15,350 km / 8,285 nm) in October 2018 — the world's longest commercial route.
- Airbus A321XLR: Airlines launching new transatlantic routes from secondary European cities to the US East Coast (e.g., Iberia, Finnair) conducted route proving in 2024 prior to commercial service.
Related Terms
Bay tầm xa hai động cơ (ETOPS)
Chứng nhận quản lý cho phép máy bay thương mại hai động cơ bay qua vùng hẻo lánh — bao gồm đại dương và vùng cực — cách xa sân bay dự phòng.
Cơ quan An toàn Hàng không EU (EASA)
Cơ quan của Liên minh châu Âu chịu trách nhiệm quản lý an toàn hàng không dân dụng, chứng nhận tàu bay và giám sát tại các quốc gia thành viên.
Cục Hàng không Liên bang Mỹ (FAA)
Cơ quan liên bang Mỹ chịu trách nhiệm quản lý và giám sát mọi khía cạnh hàng không dân dụng, bao gồm chứng nhận tàu bay, cấp phép phi công và quản lý không phận.
Tầm bay
Khoảng cách tối đa máy bay có thể bay không tiếp nhiên liệu trong điều kiện tiêu chuẩn.