ATPLSTUDY Performance
ATPL Theory — Performance (Aeroplane)

Master Aircraft Performance for your ATPL theory exam

Free practice questions covering takeoff and landing distances, balanced field length, V speeds, climb gradients, obstacle clearance, density altitude, Performance Class A/B and runway correction factors — with detailed explanations for every answer.

Questions available
10 Topic areas
75% EASA pass mark

Ready to start practising?

Enter a number or leave blank to attempt all questions.

Loading progress...

Questions
Filter
Syllabus Coverage

Topics covered in this question bank

All major Performance topic areas from the EASA ATPL syllabus, from runway requirements to en-route obstacle clearance.

Takeoff Performance & Field Length
Landing Performance
Balanced Field Length
V Speeds — V1, VR, V2, VMC
Climb Gradient Requirements
Obstacle Clearance
Performance Class A & B
Density Altitude Effects
Runway Correction Factors
Cruise, Range & Endurance
Key Reference — Performance Class A Climb Gradients

Four-segment climb gradient requirements after engine failure

The four-segment climb analysis is the most calculation-intensive topic in ATPL Performance. Net gradients (gross minus 0.8% for twin-engine aircraft) must be achieved at all segments. These exact values are directly tested in the exam.

SegmentPhase2-Engine3-Engine4-Engine
1stGear retracting (35 ft to gear up)PositivePositivePositive
2ndGear up → 400 ft (flap retraction altitude)2.4%2.7%3.0%
3rdAcceleration / flap retraction (level or climbing)Net positiveNet positiveNet positive
4th1500 ft to en-route climb configuration1.2%1.5%1.7%
EASA Exam Format

What to expect on the real exam

Performance contains a high proportion of calculation questions — candidates are expected to extract data from performance charts, apply correction factors for temperature, altitude, wind and runway slope, and calculate balanced field lengths or net climb gradients. Conceptual questions test understanding of V speeds, performance class differences and the effects of density altitude. Practise with real charts and numbers — this subject cannot be learned from definitions alone.

~50
Questions in exam
75%
Pass mark required
120 min
Exam duration
About This Subject

Why Performance is directly linked to flight safety

Performance calculations determine whether an aircraft can safely take off, climb, and land at a given airfield under prevailing conditions. Getting these calculations wrong has direct and serious consequences. The Performance paper tests both mathematical ability and conceptual understanding of the factors that affect aircraft performance.

Questions are aligned with the EASA ATPL Performance (Aeroplane) syllabus and cover Class A turbine operations in full detail, including the four-segment climb analysis, balanced field length derivation, and the declared distances (TORA, TODA, ASDA, LDA).

Sample Question

Try a question before you begin

Performance — Sample Question

Loading sample question...