What this profile covers
Loss of usable fuel quantity across the aircraft fuel system, typically involving planning, monitoring, leakage, consumption, or diversion decisions.
Why it matters
Powerplant and fuel threats can reduce available thrust, endurance, redundancy, and diversion options across every phase of flight. For fuel exhaustion, useful analysis connects the immediate event with exposure, defenses, recurrence, and the wider operating system rather than treating one observation as a final conclusion.
Propulsion reliability, fuel availability and quality, engine response, and performance consequences.
Understand the subject before interpreting a signal.
In plain language, this profile examines loss of usable fuel quantity across the aircraft fuel system, typically involving planning, monitoring, leakage, consumption, or diversion decisions.
Build a multi-source picture
- Engine commands, response, and health parameters
- Fuel quantity, quality, planning, and servicing records
- Aircraft performance and system effects
- Maintenance, inspection, and physical evidence
Timing, relationships, and recurrence
Relevant recorded context may include calibrated airspeed, roll angle, engine thrust. Use validated mappings and examine signal relationships over the applicable flight phase.
Do not turn an observation into a conclusion
A command, indication, or trend is not the same as verified produced thrust, fuel condition, or component failure; engineering corroboration remains essential.
Keep controlling material visible
Apply the current approved manuals, procedures, authority requirements, investigation evidence, and validated organizational definitions for any operational decision.
Calibrated airspeed
Indicated airspeed corrected for instrument and position error, as provided by the aircraft data system.
Open parameter guide ↗degRoll angle
Aircraft bank attitude about the longitudinal axis.
Open parameter guide ↗% / ratio / aircraft-specificEngine thrust
One or more recorded measures of commanded or produced propulsion; the correct signal depends on engine and aircraft type.
Open parameter guide ↗From a broad topic to a defensible safety review.
Define
State what fuel exhaustion means for the aircraft, operation, authority, and organization in scope.
Verify
Confirm the provenance, quality, timing, units, completeness, and limitations of every data source used.
Describe
Reconstruct what happened and quantify relevant exposure before discussing causes or corrective action.
Corroborate
Compare flight data with reports, operational context, technical evidence, and authoritative source material.
Test barriers
Identify which preventive, recovery, and consequence-mitigation controls should have worked and how their performance can be measured.
Assure
Assign proportionate action and verify whether the control and safety performance improve without harmful unintended effects.
Questions before conclusions
- Q1
How is fuel exhaustion defined for the aircraft, operation, authority, and organization being reviewed?
- Q2
Which precursors, recorded signals, reports, and external data would confirm the event and describe its context?
- Q3
Which preventive, recovery, and consequence-reduction barriers should work, and where could they weaken?
- Q4
What does recurrence, exposure, severity potential, or change over time show before choosing a safety action?
4 connected event profiles
These are terminology and family connections for exploration—not claims that FDM alone can determine the topic.
Low recorded fuel at landing
Recorded fuel quantity at approach or landing is below an operator-defined monitoring level for the completed flight context.
Open FDM profile ↗FDM-107 · Fuel, weight & balanceFuel imbalance
Recorded fuel quantity differs between tanks or sides beyond an aircraft- and phase-specific monitoring condition.
Open FDM profile ↗FDM-108 · Fuel, weight & balanceUnexpected fuel burn
Actual fuel use differs materially from the validated plan, model, or comparable-flight expectation.
Open FDM profile ↗FDM-109 · Fuel, weight & balanceFuel temperature limit proximity
Recorded fuel temperature approaches or crosses an aircraft-specific operational or system monitoring limit.
Open FDM profile ↗Go deeper into the closest ASIP research guides.
Rejected Takeoff
Understand the time-critical stop decision through speed, failure recognition, runway remaining, braking, spoilers, and reverse thrust.
Open intelligence brief ↗Aircraft SystemsEngine Failure and Thrust Loss
Separate commanded thrust, actual engine response, system effects, and crew management across partial, asymmetric, and complete thrust-loss events.
Open intelligence brief ↗Aircraft SystemsFire and Smoke
View fire safety as detection, containment, checklist action, diversion, evacuation, and rescue barriers.
Open intelligence brief ↗12 useful starting points
Original ASIP summaries lead to publisher pages. ASIP does not copy or host the reports.
SAFO 08023 — Fuel Crossfeed and Fuel Exhaustion in the Convair 580
Official U.S. Federal Aviation Administration material indexed for fuel. Open the publisher source for the complete document, scope, and current status.
Open official sourceEngine Relight After an All-engine Flameout
Official Airbus Safety First material indexed for powerplant. Open the publisher source for the complete document, scope, and current status.
Open official sourceAnnex 19 — Safety Management, Third Edition
Annex 19 consolidates ICAO safety-management provisions, including State safety responsibilities, SMS, safety-data collection and processing, and the protection and sharing of safety information.
Open official sourceAnnual Safety Review 2025
EASA's review uses occurrence and accident information to describe performance across aviation domains and to support the European safety-risk-management process.
Open official sourceStatistical Summary of Commercial Jet Airplane Accidents, 1959–2024
Boeing's 56th annual statistical summary organizes commercial-jet accident data using stated definitions and the CAST/ICAO occurrence taxonomy.
Open official sourceIATA Annual Safety Report — 2024
IATA's 61st annual report provides an interactive, method-defined view of commercial aviation accident performance and contributing-factor classifications.
Open official sourceAC 120-92D — Safety Management Systems for Aviation Service Providers
FAA guidance explains performance-based, scalable approaches to integrating safety policy, risk management, assurance, and promotion into aviation organizations.
Open official sourceAC 91-79B — Aircraft Landing Performance and Runway Excursion Mitigation
This FAA circular brings together landing-performance planning, time-of-arrival assessment, RCAM information, and operational practices for reducing runway-excursion risk.
Open official sourceSafety Alert SA-077 — Stabilized Approaches Lead to Safe Landings
The NTSB alert highlights the need to establish and maintain a stabilized approach and to go around when an approach falls outside applicable criteria.
Open official sourceHigh Load Event Reporting
The Airbus Safety First article explains why a pilot report remains central after a suspected high-load event and how recorded reports and analysis tools can support the applicable maintenance process.
Open official sourceSafety Management Manual (Doc 9859), Fourth Edition
ICAO's fourth-edition manual explains how safety data, risk management, assurance, culture, and governance work together in State and service-provider safety management.
Open official sourceGo-Around Decision-Making and Execution Project — Final Report
The Flight Safety Foundation project examines go-around policy compliance, decision biases, operational pressures, and the risks that also need to be managed during go-around execution.
Open official sourceCommon Taxonomy Team
International work on common aviation occurrence categories and definitions for consistent reporting and analysis.
Open referenceSafety Risk Management
European safety-risk process connecting data, safety issues, risk portfolios, priorities, and safety action.
Open referenceAnnual programmes and reports
Annual safety reviews and risk portfolios used to identify key risk areas, safety issues, and emerging issues.
Open referenceEuropean Plan for Aviation Safety 2025
A broad evidence-based portfolio showing the scale and connected nature of current aviation safety issues.
Open referenceOperational issues index
A practical discovery index for operational safety subjects; official authority and manufacturer sources remain controlling where applicable.
Open reference