Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide

Master the Viper’s landing procedures — from normal recovery to worst-case engine-out scenarios.


1. Introduction.

Landing proficiency in Falcon BMS is a critical skill. Whether you’re returning from a high-threat combat mission, managing a flameout, or simply running low on fuel, the ability to land safely can be the difference between mission success and disaster. This guide covers:

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Learn How to Start Your F-16 Viper.
  • Normal landing procedures and pattern flying
  • Emergency flameout approaches
  • Fuel management and best glide techniques
  • High Key / Low Key pattern theory
  • DED pages for cruise and range optimization
  • Quick reference kneeboard material

2. Normal Landing Procedure (VFR Pattern)

Lets look at the basic landing pattern before making the world a lot harder for out pilots. Getting the landing pattern to be a second nature is a great piece of knowledge so when everything goes bad you have options.

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Learn al about the NEW Falcon BMS 4.38. Amazing Update!

Key Numbers:

  • Final Approach Speed: 11° AoA = ~135–150 KIAS (depends on weight)
  • Touchdown Speed: ~130 KIAS
  • Glidepath: 3° (Aim for 12° pitch ladder + VV on threshold)
Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Pilot Landing Tutorial – Learn the basics before jumping into your F-16.

Standard Overhead Break Pattern:

  • Entry Altitude: 1,500′ AGL
  • Downwind: 1,500’ AGL, 220 KIAS
  • Base Turn: Gear down, flaps full, slow to 180–160 KIAS
  • Final: 11° AoA (~140 KIAS)

Checklist:

  • Gear: Down
  • Flaps: Full
  • Speed Brakes: As needed
  • AoA Bracket: Center the VV
  • TCN: Optional for ILS or Tacan landing

3. How to Fly a VFR Circuit in Falcon BMS

Ok here are the basic figures to fly a landing in Falcon BMS. These are pretty hard and fast so commit them to memory and you’ll be easing your viper onto the pavement with professional efficiency in no time.

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Your Questions Answered – Falcon BMS

Pattern Geometry:

SegmentAltitudeSpeedNotes
Initial1,500’350-400Overhead approach entry
Break1,500’250-220Pull Gs, enter downwind
Downwind1,500’220Flaps full, gear down abeam
Base~1,200’180Begin turn to final
Final~800’14011° AoA to touchdown

Note: Practice the VFR pattern until it’s second nature. Smooth AoA management on final is key.


4. Engine-Out / Flameout Landing Procedure.

Missions in Falcon BMS are extremely demanding and maybe you’ll get back with less fuel that you wanted. Bad things happen but a good pilot can rise to the occasion with the right knowledge.

4.1 Understanding High Key & Low Key Positions

Note: High Key and Low Key are visual and geometric markers that help guide you through an unpowered landing. Used extensively in military training, they let you build a safe glide path without guessing.

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
More Falcon BMS questions answered PT 2 – A Must!

🔹 High Key

  • Altitude: ~7,000’ AGL
  • Position: Directly overhead the landing runway
  • Configuration: Clean (gear/flaps up), 230–250 KIAS
  • Purpose: Start point for a descending 180° turn to Low Key

🔹 Low Key

  • Altitude: ~3,000’ AGL
  • Position: Abeam the intended touchdown point (left or right pattern)
  • Configuration: Gear down, flaps optional
  • Speed: ~180 KIAS
  • Purpose: Commit to landing, begin 180° descending turn to final

Note: Use High Key to gauge if you can make the field. If you can reach Low Key from High Key with energy to spare, you are safe to land.

4.2 Best Glide Performance: Speeds, AoA, and Range

AltitudeBest Glide SpeedGlide RatioRange (NM)
10,000 ft~230 KIAS~12:1~20 NM
20,000 ft~240 KIAS~13:1~42 NM
30,000 ft~250 KIAS~14:1~65 NM
35,000+ ft~255 KIAS~14.5:1~75+ NM

Glide Profile Techniques

  • AoA: ~4°–5° (trim for stable descent)
  • Zoom climb if flameout occurs at >250 KIAS
  • Avoid banking >30°
  • Gear down only once field is assured

5. Low Fuel / Imminent Flameout Strategy

Fuel Reference Points:

StateFuel (lbs)
JokerCustom set mid-mission
BingoBased on RTB range
Min Fuel RTB~2,000 lbs
Emergency<1,200 lbs

Strategy:

  • Monitor CRUS page for optimum cruise alt/speed
  • Use max range speeds (see next section) if engine is running
  • Plan flameout glide from 30,000+ ft when possible

Note: Rule of Thumb: 1,000 ft = ~2 NM glide range


6. DED Pages for Navigation & Fuel Efficiency

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Falcon BMS 4.38 Navigation Basics – Learn more Now!

Cruise Info:

  • ICP: LIST → MISC → CRUS (Page 2)
  • Displays:
    • Optimum Altitude
    • Max Range KTAS / Mach
    • Max Endurance Speed

Navigation:

  • ICP: LIST → 1 (DEST)
    • Fuel Remaining / Distance to Waypoint
  • ICP: LIST → 0 (DTC)
    • Confirm DTC loaded

7. Quick Reference Kneeboard Inserts

Normal Landing Quick Guide

Downwind:   1,500’ AGL, 220 KIAS
Gear Down:  Abeam threshold
Base:       180–160 KIAS
Final:      11° AoA (~140 KIAS)
Touchdown:  ~130 KIAS

Flameout Pattern (No Power)

High Key:   ~7,000’ AGL, clean, 230–250 KIAS
Low Key:    ~3,000’ AGL, gear down, 180 KIAS
Best Glide: ~240 KIAS, 4°–5° AoA
Range:      ~12–14 NM per 10k ft
Final:      11° AoA, firm touchdown

DED CRUS Info

Opt Alt:        Displayed on CRUS
Max Range SPD:  ~275–300 KTAS
Max Endurance:  ~200–220 KTAS
AoA:            3°–6°

8. Practice Scenarios (Optional Section)

Falcon BMS 4.38 Viper Emergency & Landing Guide.
Military Flight Simulators Guide. Read More Now!

Include practice missions to simulate:

  • Normal VFR patterns
  • Dead-stick approaches from 30,000 ft
  • Fuel emergencies
  • ILS/Tacan landings

LetsFlyVFR.COM Shop Banner
Visit the LetsFlyVFR Shop today! Great Ideas there!

Bonus: Download the Free Falcon BMS Navigation Kneeboard

Available here: – Includes ICP shortcuts, DED reference pages, TACAN list, and ILS setup cheat sheet. DOWNLOAD Kneeboard Here!


Author

Brendon McAliece - Gunnie and a Jabiru 170 Sport Pilot Certified.
Brendon McAliece Jabiru 170

Brendon McAliece (Aka Gunnie) is a military veteran with 23 years working on Jet Fighters, their weapons systems and ejection seat/module systems as well as munitions and R&D. Involved with flight simulation since the 1980s, he has flown all the major flight simulators over the years.

He is an Australian expat who has lived in Malaysia, UK, Saudi Arabia and more recently Thailand. He is a multi-lingual blogger who loves to share his life experiences here on LetsFlyVFR.com and DreamingGuitar.com, with his lifestyle and Travel experiences Blog plus his Dreaming Coffee website.

Learn More @ 
DreamingGuitar.com – DreamingCoffee.com – LetsFlyVFR.com

(HOME – BLOG – SHOP – ABOUT)

This page has been viewed 4 times.

As an Amazon affiliate I may benefit from qualifying sales.