Pilots use altimeters to measure aircraft altitude. However, altimeters rely on barometric pressure, and that pressure changes with weather conditions. To ensure consistent and safe altitude readings, pilots adjust their altimeters using specific pressure settings: QNH, QFE, or Standard Pressure (STD/1013 hPa). Depending on the setting, the altimeter shows different reference heights.
Phraseology example:
"QNH one zero one eight, set and crosscheck."
Phraseology example:
"QFE one zero zero five, indicating zero on the ground."
Phraseology example:
"Climb to flight level eight zero."
Conversion example:
If QNH is 1013 hPa, FL050 ≈ 5,000 ft
If QNH is lower (e.g., 990), FL050 may indicate ~4,700 ft AMSL
The gap between them is the transition layer, ensuring separation between ascending and descending traffic.
Setting | Altimeter shows... | Used when | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
QNH | Altitude above MSL | Takeoff, enroute (low), landing | Sea level |
QFE | Height above airfield | Ground ops, some gliding | Field elevation |
STD | Flight level | Enroute (high alt), above transition altitude | 1013.25 hPa |
Incorrect settings can lead to altitude deviations, loss of separation, and airspace violations. It is essential to update and crosscheck altimeter settings when cleared by ATC or as part of standard procedures.
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