Comment by m4rtink 6 months ago A380 has 4 engines, so maybe it doees this with more than one ? 3 comments m4rtink Reply jimnotgym 6 months ago I think it means it can do it with 1, but the fact it has 4 gives it great redundancy. bangaladore 6 months ago I'm not sure. In the case of 4 engines, it may be 2 is how they certify it. Specifically I think the case where both engines on the same wing fail (as the worst case other that losing 3) asdfaoeu 6 months ago The rating is taking into consideration that it has 4 engines. The term is just confusing because it used to only apply to twin engine aircraft.
jimnotgym 6 months ago I think it means it can do it with 1, but the fact it has 4 gives it great redundancy. bangaladore 6 months ago I'm not sure. In the case of 4 engines, it may be 2 is how they certify it. Specifically I think the case where both engines on the same wing fail (as the worst case other that losing 3) asdfaoeu 6 months ago The rating is taking into consideration that it has 4 engines. The term is just confusing because it used to only apply to twin engine aircraft.
bangaladore 6 months ago I'm not sure. In the case of 4 engines, it may be 2 is how they certify it. Specifically I think the case where both engines on the same wing fail (as the worst case other that losing 3)
asdfaoeu 6 months ago The rating is taking into consideration that it has 4 engines. The term is just confusing because it used to only apply to twin engine aircraft.
I think it means it can do it with 1, but the fact it has 4 gives it great redundancy.
I'm not sure. In the case of 4 engines, it may be 2 is how they certify it. Specifically I think the case where both engines on the same wing fail (as the worst case other that losing 3)
The rating is taking into consideration that it has 4 engines. The term is just confusing because it used to only apply to twin engine aircraft.