Flight Planning

unchanged

Climb segment from gear retraction to acceleration altitude with one-engine inoperative, maintaining prescribed gradient.

Quick answer: Climb segment from gear retraction to acceleration altitude with one-engine inoperative, maintaining prescribed gradient.

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Quick answer

Climb segment from gear retraction to acceleration altitude with one-engine inoperative, maintaining prescribed gradient.

Why it matters

unchanged matters because it supports clear communication in Flight Planning contexts for Pilots, Air Traffic Controllers, and Cabin Crew. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as ICAO Level 4, ICAO Level 5, ICAO Level 6, and EASA FCL.055.

Editorial context

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Questions and answers

Questions and answers

What is unchanged?

In this glossary, unchanged refers to: Climb segment from gear retraction to acceleration altitude with one-engine inoperative, maintaining prescribed gradient.

How is unchanged used in aviation?

In aviation communication, this term appears in contexts such as: "unchanged"

Why does unchanged matter in aviation?

unchanged matters because it supports clear communication in Flight Planning contexts for Pilots, Air Traffic Controllers, and Cabin Crew. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as ICAO Level 4, ICAO Level 5, ICAO Level 6, and EASA FCL.055.

Who uses unchanged?

unchanged is mainly used by Pilots, Air Traffic Controllers, and Cabin Crew.

What category does unchanged belong to?

In this glossary, unchanged is grouped under Flight Planning. Related pages in this category explain adjacent procedures, commands and operational concepts.

Where does this definition come from?

This definition is sourced from ICAO Doc 9432, FAA PCG and published by Protermify Aviation as a static aviation reference page.

Definition

Climb segment from gear retraction to acceleration altitude with one-engine inoperative, maintaining prescribed gradient.

Operational example

After gear up, Flight 456 commences second‑segment climb maintaining two‑engine‑inoperative climb gradient as per performance sheet.

Definition language

English reference definition

Source

ICAO Doc 9432, FAA PCG

Category

Flight Planning

Exam relevance

  • ICAO Level 4
  • ICAO Level 5
  • ICAO Level 6
  • EASA FCL.055

Target audience

  • Pilots
  • Air Traffic Controllers
  • Cabin Crew

Related terms

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