What altitude do propeller planes fly at?

While commercial aircraft typically fly between 31,000 and 38,000 feet, why do turboprops typically have service ceilings of less than 30,000? The answer is that turboprops are most efficient at an altitude between 25,000 and 30,000 feet.
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What is the highest altitude a prop plane can fly?

How high can propeller airplanes fly?
  • 12,000m (39,370ft): Antonow An-70, produced 1994.
  • 12,310m (40,387ft): Lockheed Martin C-130J Super Hercules, delivered in 2012.
  • 12,500m (41,010ft): Piaggio P. 180 Avanti, production started in 1986.
  • 29,523m (96,860ft): NASA Helios HP01, record altitude reached in 2001.
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What altitude do propellers stop working?

What Altitude Do Propellers Stop Working? The propellers can only be used from a home location below 2500 m. It is possible to use both types of propellers between 1500 m and 2500 m. The high-altitude propellers, however, will increase your flight time significantly.
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What altitude do turboprops fly at?

Turboprop engines are most efficient at speeds between 250 and 400 mph and altitudes between 18,000 and 30,000 feet. They also perform well at the slow speeds required for takeoff and landing and are fuel efficient.
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Why can't turboprop fly at high altitudes?

Air is very thin at high altitude and the propellors cannot grab enough air to throw backwards to generate the thrust. TurboJet engine fans spin at 3 to 5 times the speed of propellors and can generate that thrust.
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Why are propeller planes so rare?



Are turboprops safer than jets?

Turboprop vs Jet Safety

Both turboprops and jets are powered by turbine engines, so they are essentially the same thing and thus, are considered to be equally as safe. The main difference is that turboprops have a propeller on the outside of the engine while jets have fan blades inside the engine housing.
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How fast does a commercial prop plane fly?

Specified cruising speeds for commercial airliners today range between about 480 and 510 knots, compared to 525 knots for the Boeing 707, a mainstay of 1960s jet travel.
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Can a private pilot fly a turboprop?

There's a class of airplanes that offer performance well beyond any piston twin, but can be legally flown by any pilot with a private license, complex and high-performance endorsements, a high-altitude/pressurized endorsement and instrument rating: cabin-class turboprop singles, including the Epic LT, Pilatus PC-12, ...
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Are prop planes slower than jets?

Turboprops burn less fuel but they are much slower so it ultimately evens out in the end. Jets are much more sensitive to austere and unprepared or unmaintained airfields and require considerably longer pavement for takeoffs and landings.
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Are propellers more efficient than jets?

If you want to go slow in a small plane, propellers (driven by piston engines!) are far more efficient than jets because when you scale a jet engine down in size and thrust, its propulsive efficiency falls quickly and its operation is so uneconomic as to be uncompetitive compared to piston-driven propellers.
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How far can propeller planes fly?

Propeller Aircraft are the most economical choice for short to mid-range trips. While operating in and out of regional airports with short runways, propeller aircraft can cruise at speeds of 300 knots and non-stop ranges of about 1,500 miles, with an average flight duration of approximately 3 hours.
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Can a plane fly at 55000 feet?

The highest that a commercial airplane can fly is 45,000 feet. Most military planes fly at around 50,000 feet and sometimes higher. Some rocket-powered planes can fly as high as 100,000 feet but they are specially designed for this purpose.
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What happens if a plane flies too high?

If a passenger jet flies too high, it reaches a point called 'Coffin Corner'. This is the point at which the aircraft's low speed stall and high-speed buffet meet and the plane can no longer maintain its altitude which forces it to descend.
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How high can a piston engine fly?

Most of today's piston engines are run between 60% and 75% of maximum power while in cruise, and it turns out that is generally the maximum available from the engine at somewhere between 7,000' and 12,000', depending on the installation. Aircraft with turbocharged engines fly under different constraints.
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Do turboprops do run ups?

Question: Why don't jets do run-ups like piston aircraft? Answer: Turbine engines (jets and turboprops) do not need the same kind of preflight checks as piston engines. The run-ups executed by pilots of piston-engine airplanes allow them to check the ignition system for the spark plugs, plus the propeller controls.
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What fuel does a turboprop use?

Avgas (short for aviation gasoline) is used to power piston engines aircraft, which rely on the rotation of their propellers to generate thrust. Many modern turboprop planes also run on Jet fuel, as they feature engines with a gas turbine which power their propellers.
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Why do airlines still use turboprops?

The planes aren't as fast as jet planes, especially on longer routes. But, importantly, turboprops offer substantial efficiency improvements compared with jet aircraft on short-haul routes, an asset that operators may find attractive as they seek to meet ambitious sustainability targets.
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What license do I need to fly a turboprop?

In the United States, you must obtain a type rating endorsement to act as pilot in command (PIC) of any size or type of turbojet-powered aircraft. You also need a type rating endorsement to fly a turboprop aircraft that exceeds the maximum takeoff weight (MTOW) standard of 12,500 lbs.
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Do you need an endorsement for turboprop?

In addition to the private pilot's license you already have, it's important to know what other certifications and endorsements are essential for turboprop planes. Most importantly, you should look into getting a high altitude endorsement, complex endorsement, and high performance endorsement.
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How much does a turboprop plane cost?

Buyers shopping for a new business turboprop aircraft can expect to pay between $2.21m for a small single-engine model up to around $8.81m for a large twin-engine turboprop, per Aircraft Bluebook's Spring 2022 data. Popular models available today are built by Beechcraft, Cessna, Daher, Piaggio, Pilatus and Piper.
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What is the slowest speed a plane can fly?

Aeroplanes, or airplanes if you're American, need to maintain a certain speed to allow flight. Technically this is the so-called 'stall speed', where air passes over the wings fast enough to sustain altitude, and for small planes this can be less than 50km/h (31mph).
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Why do planes speed up before landing?

The aircraft flares just before touching down. It descends with a constant velocity, and just before touching down pulls the nose up to reduce the descent. This results in a higher angle of attack, more lift, and a vertical deceleration of the airplane.
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What speed breaks the sound barrier?

The speed at which you break the sound barrier depends on many conditions, including weather and altitude. It's approximately 770 mph or 1,239 kmh at sea level.
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Can a prop plane go supersonic?

Supersonic level flight? No. The fastest propeller-driven aircraft is either the turboprop-powered TU-114 with a measured top speed of Mach 0.73 or the turboprop-powered XF-84H "Thunderscreech" with a design top speed of Mach 0.9 and an actual top speed of either Mach 0.83 or Mach 0.7 (sources disagree).
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