Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR

 
pmolsen
Topic Author
Posts: 7
Joined: Tue Oct 20, 2015 2:27 am

A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Tue Apr 11, 2017 7:17 am

Can anyone advise the order in which the fuel in the fuel tanks in an A380 is used please? My understanding is that the inner tanks empty first but I just wanted to check.
 
tupperjets
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2016 11:41 pm

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Tue Apr 11, 2017 8:26 am

Center tank first for wing bending relief would be the only sane choice...
 
User avatar
Starlionblue
Posts: 21730
Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2004 9:54 pm

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Tue Apr 11, 2017 8:50 am

I'm pretty sure the 380 has no center tank, at least in the current version. But if it did, that would always be emptied first.

Typically you'd empty from inboard and out, but with quads it becomes a bit more complex. I think the 380 has four tanks per wing plus the trim tank.

Looking at this diagram, my guess is something like this:
- Inboard engines fed from feed tanks "2". Outer engines fed from feed tanks "1".
- Inner tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Mid tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Trim tank transfers to the feed tanks once at a certain fuel level or at a certain time before arrival.
- Outer tanks transfer to the feed tanks.


Image
 
frmrCapCadet
Posts: 6370
Joined: Thu May 29, 2008 8:24 pm

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Tue Apr 11, 2017 2:36 pm

How does a plane with that many systems, toilets, fuel tanks, lights, kitchens, passengers etc fly without a jack of all trades who can fix anything fixable? Kind of like a 'supe' in a luxury apartment tower. Obviously at the beck and call first of the pilot, down to a passenger who just threw up in the toilet. In this case do the tanks ever have to be managed manually?
 
User avatar
Starlionblue
Posts: 21730
Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2004 9:54 pm

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Tue Apr 11, 2017 2:58 pm

frmrCapCadet wrote:
How does a plane with that many systems, toilets, fuel tanks, lights, kitchens, passengers etc fly without a jack of all trades who can fix anything fixable? Kind of like a 'supe' in a luxury apartment tower. Obviously at the beck and call first of the pilot, down to a passenger who just threw up in the toilet. In this case do the tanks ever have to be managed manually?


I don't fly the 380, but the 330 doesn't exactly have the simplest fuel system either. Or as described by one of my instructors: "obviously designed by a lunatic..."

That being said, unless there's an emergency, all we do is turn the fuel pumps on during cockpit prep, and turn them off after we park. All the magic of trim tank transfers, outer tank transfers, APU feeding from different locations and so on is automatic. If there is an emergency, most likely ECAM and/or the QRH will tell us what to do. Of course we have to understand the intricacies in case something happens, but the finicky stuff doesn't exactly come up on a daily basis.

There used to be a flight engineer to deal with all the fiddly bits. Done by computers now. Not to say a flight engineer wouldn't be handy every now and then (they certainly knew the systems), but stuff like managing pressurization manually in normal operations is a thing of the past.
 
User avatar
jetmech
Posts: 2435
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 2:14 am

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Wed Apr 12, 2017 9:16 am

Starlionblue wrote:
I'm pretty sure the 380 has no center tank, at least in the current version. But if it did, that would always be emptied first.

Typically you'd empty from inboard and out, but with quads it becomes a bit more complex. I think the 380 has four tanks per wing plus the trim tank.

Looking at this diagram, my guess is something like this:
- Inboard engines fed from feed tanks "2". Outer engines fed from feed tanks "1".
- Inner tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Mid tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Trim tank transfers to the feed tanks once at a certain fuel level or at a certain time before arrival.
- Outer tanks transfer to the feed tanks.

That's pretty much it according to page 158 of the following PDF

http://www.smartcockpit.com/docs/A380_B ... rt%202.pdf

Regards, JetMech
 
User avatar
Starlionblue
Posts: 21730
Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2004 9:54 pm

Re: A380 Fuel Tanks Usage Order

Wed Apr 12, 2017 9:34 am

jetmech wrote:
Starlionblue wrote:
I'm pretty sure the 380 has no center tank, at least in the current version. But if it did, that would always be emptied first.

Typically you'd empty from inboard and out, but with quads it becomes a bit more complex. I think the 380 has four tanks per wing plus the trim tank.

Looking at this diagram, my guess is something like this:
- Inboard engines fed from feed tanks "2". Outer engines fed from feed tanks "1".
- Inner tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Mid tanks transfer to feed tanks.
- Trim tank transfers to the feed tanks once at a certain fuel level or at a certain time before arrival.
- Outer tanks transfer to the feed tanks.

That's pretty much it according to page 158 of the following PDF

http://www.smartcockpit.com/docs/A380_B ... rt%202.pdf

Regards, JetMech


Thanks for that PDF. Very interesting.

It seems they started with the 330/340 fuel system and made it more complex. So much complexity. That fuel panel is giving me nightmares.

I can see it now... 5 hours left on a loooong line check sector.
Check captain: "All that was good, but let's talk about the fuel system."
Pilot being checked thinking ***I wonder how much it will hurt if I stab myself in the eye with this plastic fork***

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 34 guests

Popular Searches On Airliners.net

Top Photos of Last:   24 Hours  •  48 Hours  •  7 Days  •  30 Days  •  180 Days  •  365 Days  •  All Time

Military Aircraft Every type from fighters to helicopters from air forces around the globe

Classic Airliners Props and jets from the good old days

Flight Decks Views from inside the cockpit

Aircraft Cabins Passenger cabin shots showing seat arrangements as well as cargo aircraft interior

Cargo Aircraft Pictures of great freighter aircraft

Government Aircraft Aircraft flying government officials

Helicopters Our large helicopter section. Both military and civil versions

Blimps / Airships Everything from the Goodyear blimp to the Zeppelin

Night Photos Beautiful shots taken while the sun is below the horizon

Accidents Accident, incident and crash related photos

Air to Air Photos taken by airborne photographers of airborne aircraft

Special Paint Schemes Aircraft painted in beautiful and original liveries

Airport Overviews Airport overviews from the air or ground

Tails and Winglets Tail and Winglet closeups with beautiful airline logos