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Latest revision as of 23:47, 5 March 2026

Operations Manual · v3.2
Pilot Procedures
& SOPs
Skyward Air Virtual · Standard Operating Procedures
This document defines the standard operating procedures for all Skyward Air Virtual flight operations. All active pilots are required to be familiar with and operate in accordance with these procedures at all times. These SOPs apply to all aircraft types in the fleet unless otherwise stated.
v3.2
Current Revision
7
Sections
ICAO
Phraseology Standard

REVISION ◆ v3.2 — Departure procedures updated. All pilots must review Section 1 before next flight. Previous v3.1 procedures are superseded.

01
Pushback & Taxi Procedures
Gate departure through runway holding point
Pre-Pushback Checks
ATIS/D-ATIS obtained and current — note QNH, active runway, and any NOTAMs
Flight plan loaded and crosschecked in FMS — SID, route, STAR, and alternates confirmed
Fuel uplift confirmed against flight plan requirements plus reserves
Doors closed, jetway retracted, area around aircraft clear
Clearance delivery contacted — IFR clearance obtained and read back in full
Transponder set to assigned squawk, mode set to STBY until airborne
Pushback clearance requested from ground control
Pushback
Request pushback from Ground on the published ground frequency. State your stand number, aircraft type, and intended pushback direction. Standard phraseology:
"{Airport} Ground, Skyward {flight number}, stand {stand}, request pushback and start, information {ATIS letter}."
"{Flight number}, {Airport} Ground, pushback approved, face {direction}, QNH {value}."
Engines may be started during or after pushback at pilot discretion. Complete all engine start items per aircraft type checklist before calling for taxi.
Taxi
Taxi clearance obtained from Ground before moving — read back runway, hold short instructions, and any crossing clearances in full
Taxi speed not to exceed 30 kts on straight sections, 10 kts in turns
Lights — taxi light ON, strobes OFF until entering active runway
Verify runway identity before entering — confirm with signage and confirm ATC clearance to enter
Takeoff briefing complete before reaching holding point
Contact Tower when instructed by Ground or when approaching holding point
02
Standard Departure Procedures
Runway entry through initial climb · Revised v3.2

v3.2 Updated

v3.2 Revision: Departure power settings and initial climb speed targets have been updated. Pilots who flew under v3.1 must review this section before their next departure.
Runway Entry & Line-Up
Tower takeoff clearance obtained before entering runway
Strobes ON upon entering runway
Landing lights ON
Transponder to ALT/AUTO mode
Verify runway heading aligned with compass
Confirm V speeds set: V1, VR, V2
Takeoff Roll
Advance thrust to approximately 40% N1 and verify stable before advancing to takeoff thrust. At V1 the takeoff is committed — do not abort above V1 unless a catastrophic failure demands it. Rotate smoothly at VR targeting 12–15° pitch attitude. Positive rate of climb confirmed before gear retraction.
Thrust set — FLEX/TOGA as per performance calculation
80 kts — instruments crosschecked, call "Eighty Knots"
V1 — decision speed, call "V1"
VR — rotate smoothly 2–3°/sec, call "Rotate"
V2 + positive rate — call "Positive Rate, Gear Up"
Initial Climb (v3.2)
Maintain runway heading and SID constraints until above 1,000 ft AAL. Autopilot may be engaged at or above 500 ft AAL at pilot discretion. Adhere strictly to any SID speed or altitude restrictions.
Phase Target Speed Notes
V2 + 10 kts | Maintain positive climb rate
Per SID or ATC | Do not exceed flap placard speeds
250 kts / Mach | Typically 3,000–5,000 ft AAL
280–300 kts | Landing lights OFF above FL100
Mach 0.78–0.85 | Per aircraft type
Post-Takeoff Checks
Gear UP and confirmed — no gear indications
Flaps retracted on schedule per flap retraction speed schedule
Landing lights OFF passing FL100
Seat belt sign reviewed at pilot discretion once in smooth air
Contact Departure/Radar as instructed by Tower
ACARS airborne report transmitted if applicable
03
Cruise & En-Route Procedures
Top of climb through top of descent
Cruise Level Selection
Cruise flight level should be selected in accordance with ICAO hemispherical cruising levels unless otherwise assigned by ATC. Eastbound flights (000°–179° magnetic) fly odd thousands; westbound (180°–359°) fly even thousands.
Aircraft Typical Initial Cruise Optimum Cruise Max Cruise
FL320 – FL360 | FL370 – FL380 | FL390
FL370 – FL390 | FL400 – FL420 | FL430
FL360 – FL390 | FL390 – FL410 | FL430
En-Route Monitoring
Fuel quantity checked against flight plan at each waypoint — note any discrepancy exceeding 200 kg
Weather radar active and deviation requests made to ATC early — minimum 10 NM lateral separation from CB cells
SELCAL watch maintained if equipped — acknowledge all calls promptly
Position reports made on HF or via ACARS/CPDLC where applicable
Step climb requested from ATC when aircraft is 2,000 ft above optimum altitude
Destination weather and ATIS checked approximately 30–45 minutes before TOD
Top of Descent Planning
Plan top of descent to meet any published STAR constraints. Use the FMS descent calculator as primary reference. A general rule of thumb: multiply altitude to lose (in thousands of feet) by 3 to get the distance (in NM) for descent commencement at idle thrust, e.g. FL380 to sea level = 38 × 3 = 114 NM.

💡

Always request descent early on VATSIM/IVAO — ATC may have sequencing requirements that affect your descent profile. Never begin descent without an ATC clearance when on the network.
04
Arrival & Approach Procedures
Top of descent through landing rollout
Descent & Approach Preparation
Destination ATIS obtained — active runway, approach type, QNH, and weather noted
Approach briefing complete — type of approach, minimums, missed approach procedure, alternate
STAR loaded and confirmed in FMS
Landing performance calculated — Vapp, Vref, landing distance
Altimeters set to destination QNH passing transition level
Landing lights ON below FL100
Approach Speed Schedule
Gate Configuration Target Speed
Clean | 250 kts max below FL100
Flaps 1 | 220 kts or as ATC instructs
Flaps 2 | 180–200 kts
Flaps 3 | 160–180 kts
Flaps Full, Gear Down | Vapp (typically 135–145 kts)
Flaps Full | Vref + wind correction
Stabilised Approach Criteria
All SAV flights must be stabilised by 1,000 ft AAL in IMC or 500 ft AAL in VMC. A go-around must be initiated immediately if any of the following criteria are not met:
On correct approach path (glideslope/PAPI)
Speed within +10 / -5 kts of Vapp
Sink rate not exceeding 1,000 fpm
Landing configuration — gear down, full flaps
Do not continue if above glideslope with full power
Do not continue if runway not in sight at minimums
Landing & Rollout
Land in the touchdown zone — aim for 300–1,000 ft past threshold
Autobrake armed to appropriate setting — or manual braking applied smoothly
Thrust reversers deployed immediately on touchdown (forward idle below 70 kts)
Vacate runway at a safe taxi speed — do not stop on runway
Strobes OFF once clear of runway. Landing lights OFF. Taxi light ON.
Contact Ground for taxi to stand
05
Weight & Balance / Fuel Planning
Pre-flight load planning standards
Fuel Planning Requirements
All SAV flights must carry the following minimum fuel. Fuel planning must account for actual route distance, forecast winds, and expected routing.
Fuel Component Requirement Notes
Full route requirement | Block to block, per FMS calculation
5% of trip fuel | Minimum — increase for long oceanic sectors
Destination to alternate | Must be filed if wx below limits
30 min at holding speed | Non-negotiable minimum at destination
Pilot's discretion | Recommended for oceanic / remote routing
Weight Limits Reference
Limit A320 A350-900 B787-9
77,000 kg | 280,000 kg | 254,011 kg
66,000 kg | 207,000 kg | 192,777 kg
62,500 kg | 192,000 kg | 181,437 kg
26,730 L | 158,000 L | 126,920 L

Always calculate an actual landing weight before departure. If fuel burn results in a landing weight above MLW, a fuel jettison plan or extended holding must be considered. The A320 has no jettison capability.
06
ATC Phraseology & Communications
ICAO standard phraseology — used on all SAV flights
Skyward Air Virtual follows real-world ICAO standard phraseology on all flights, whether online (VATSIM/IVAO) or offline. Use your assigned callsign at all times: Skyward {flight number} (e.g. "Skyward 101").
Key Phraseology Examples
"{Airport} Delivery, Skyward 101, Boeing 787, stand 42, request IFR clearance to {destination}, information Bravo."
"Skyward 101, cleared to {destination} via {SID}, squawk 2341, climb initially FL80, expect FL350 10 minutes after departure."
"Cleared to {destination} via {SID}, squawk 2341, climb initially FL80, Skyward 101."
"{Airport} Ground, Skyward 101, stand 42, request pushback and start."
"Skyward 101, push back approved, face west, QNH 1013."
"Push back approved, face west, Skyward 101."
"{Airport} Tower, Skyward 101, holding point runway 27L, ready for departure."
"Skyward 101, runway 27L, wind 260 at 8, cleared for takeoff."
"Runway 27L, cleared for takeoff, Skyward 101."
"{Airport} Approach, Skyward 101, FL180, descending FL80, information Delta, request ILS runway 09R."
"Skyward 101, identified, descend FL60, expect ILS runway 09R, QNH 1016."
"Descend FL60, expect ILS 09R, QNH 1016, Skyward 101."
"MAYDAY, MAYDAY, MAYDAY — {ATC unit}, Skyward 101, {nature of emergency}, {altitude}, {intentions}, {souls on board if known}."
Readback Requirements
The following instructions must always be read back in full:
Runway in use for takeoff or landing
Takeoff and landing clearances
Runway crossing clearances
Hold short instructions
Squawk codes
Altimeter settings (QNH)
Altitude and flight level assignments
Speed and heading assignments
07
Emergency & Abnormal Procedures
Non-normal operations & crew response

Aviate. Navigate. Communicate. In any emergency, maintain aircraft control first, establish a safe flight path second, then communicate with ATC. Never sacrifice aircraft control for communication.
General Emergency Response Priority
1
Aviate
Maintain aircraft control. Set a safe pitch and power. Engage autopilot if it assists workload management.
2
Navigate
Establish position. Identify nearest suitable airport. Begin diversion planning if required. Avoid terrain and airspace conflicts.
3
Communicate
Declare MAYDAY or PAN-PAN as appropriate. Squawk 7700. Advise ATC of nature, intentions, and souls on board. Request assistance.
4
Execute Checklist
Complete the relevant emergency checklist for your aircraft type. Do not action memory items from memory alone — verify against the published checklist.
Emergency Squawk Codes
Code Meaning When to Use
General emergency | Any life-threatening emergency — MAYDAY
Radio failure | Unable to contact ATC on any frequency
Unlawful interference | Hijack or threat situation only
Go-Around Procedure
A go-around must be initiated without hesitation whenever the stabilised approach criteria are not met, ATC instructs a go-around, or the runway is not clear. There is never a wrong decision to go around.
THRUST — TOGA (go-around thrust)
Pitch — 10–15° nose up, arrest sink rate
Call "Go Around, Flaps" — select go-around flap setting
Positive rate of climb — "Gear Up"
Follow published missed approach procedure or ATC instructions
Advise ATC immediately: "Going around, Skyward {number}"
Revision History
Version Date Changes
March 2026 | Departure power settings revised. Climb speed schedule updated. Current version.
January 2026 | Fuel planning minimums updated. Weight table added.
October 2025 | Full SOP rewrite. ICAO phraseology adopted as standard.