Cost Index — What Does It Do?

beginner
📍 Route: LIRF → LEMD⏱ ~3 minutes📊 5 steps

Most pilots type a cost index from their OFP and never think about it again. In this scenario you try three values — 0, 30, and 80 — to feel what the number actually controls: the trade-off between speed and fuel burn.

Start this scenario

Open the SimTuts A320 MCDU trainer and select “Cost Index — What Does It Do?” from the scenarios list to walk through it step-by-step on the simulated keypad.

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Step-by-step: Cost Index — What Does It Do?

  1. Set up the route. Type LIRF/LEMD (Rome Fiumicino to Madrid) and press 1R.

    Cost Index (CI) is a single number that tells the FMS how to balance two costs: the cost of fuel, and the cost of time (crew, maintenance, schedule). The FMS uses CI to compute one optimum cruise speed (ECON SPD) and one optimum descent profile.

  2. Try CI = 0 first. Type 0 and press 5L.

    CI 0 means "fuel is everything, time is free." The FMS picks the slowest cruise speed that still gets the aircraft there — Maximum Range Cruise. You burn the least fuel possible but the flight takes longer. Almost no airline uses CI 0 in real operations because crew/maintenance costs make time too valuable.

  3. Now try CI = 30 — a typical airline value. Type 30 and press 5L.

    CI 30 is roughly where most short/medium-haul airlines operate. The FMS picks an ECON speed about Mach 0.78 in cruise — fast enough to keep the schedule, slow enough to save real fuel. The exact number per airline depends on their fuel-vs-crew cost ratio, fleet age, and route mix.

  4. Now try CI = 80 — pushing the speed up. Type 80 and press 5L.

    CI 80 means "we are late, get us there." ECON cruise climbs to roughly Mach 0.80 — pushing toward the A320's MMO of Mach 0.82. Fuel burn rises sharply because drag scales with speed squared. Used to recover from delays, ATC speed restrictions, or airline-mandated catch-up. The maximum CI an Airbus FMS accepts is 999, but values above 100 are rare in practice.

  5. Set CI back to 30 — the value you would actually fly. Type 30 and press 5L.

    The OFP your dispatcher prints will have a CI on it (e.g. CI 32, CI 28, CI 45). You enter exactly what they wrote — they have already balanced the day's fuel price and any schedule pressure. Your job is to type it accurately, not to guess a "good" value.

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