Assumed Temperature — Reduced Thrust Takeoff
beginnerReduced-thrust takeoff (Boeing calls it ATM — Assumed Temperature Method) tells the engines it is hotter outside than it really is, so they produce less thrust. Try three values to feel the trade-off between engine wear and performance margin.
Start this scenario
Open the SimTuts 737 CDU trainer and select “Assumed Temperature — Reduced Thrust Takeoff” from the scenarios list to walk through it step-by-step on the simulated keypad.
Open trainer →Step-by-step: Assumed Temperature — Reduced Thrust Takeoff
- Open the N1 LIMIT page. ASSUMED TEMP lives at the bottom of it.
The 737's Assumed Temperature Method (ATM) is set on N1 LIMIT. The FMC uses the assumed OAT to compute a reduced takeoff N1 — the engines spool to a lower fan speed than full thrust. The actual outside temperature does not change; only what the engines "think" it is.
- Try ASSUMED 40°C first — a small thrust reduction. Type 40 and press 5L.
Assumed 40°C gives only a small reduction over the real +15°C OAT shown above. Real airlines rarely use this little because the engine-wear saving is small — but on a hot day where the real OAT is already 35°C, even +5°C of ATM is meaningful.
- Now try ASSUMED 50°C — a typical European short-haul value. Type 50 and press 5L.
50°C is a common day-to-day value for the 737NG on a mild day. The FMC drops takeoff N1 by 3–5%. Engine T5 (turbine temperature) runs cooler, hot-section parts last longer, and you still have enough performance margin on a long runway.
- Now try ASSUMED 70°C — pushing toward the maximum. Type 70 and press 5L.
70°C is around the upper limit accepted by Boeing's ATM on the CFM56-7B. The real limit is the airline's performance calculation — you cannot assume more than the runway, weight, wind, and weather actually allow. Forbidden on contaminated runways and at limit weights. Above this you must use full TO thrust.
- Set ASSUMED back to 50°C — the realistic operational value. Type 50 and press 5L.
Real flights use whatever ASSUMED TEMP the EFB performance calculation produces — rarely a round number. You enter exactly what dispatch hands you. 50°C here is a stand-in for "the value computed for today's conditions, weight, and runway".
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