Definition
The maximum allowable operating temperatures specified by the engine manufacturer for a turbine engine, particularly the temperature of the gases passing through or just past the turbine section. Exceeding these limits, even briefly, can cause damage to turbine blades and other hot-section components and may require inspection or overhaul.
Plain English
The hottest the engine is allowed to get before it starts being damaged. Each engine has set numbers the pilot must not exceed, and going over them — even for a short time — can cause real harm to the engine.
Context Anchor
Seen in turbine engine operating procedures, aircraft limitations, engine instrument markings, and checklist items for start, takeoff, climb, and cruise.
Why Pilots Care
Exceeding these limits can cause immediate engine damage, reduced service life, or in-flight failure.
Analogy
Engine temperature limits are like the red marks on an oven thermometer: they do not tell you the oven is working well; they tell you where the safe range ends.
Grounding Statement
In practice, the pilot watches the engine temperature gauge and keeps the indication within the approved range for the current phase of operation.
Intuition Check
Do not treat engine temperature limits as rough guidelines. In aviation, a limit is an approved boundary; going beyond it can damage the engine and may require corrective action or inspection.
Example Sentence 1
During the start sequence, the pilot watched the temperature gauge carefully to make sure the engine temperature limits were not exceeded.
Example Sentence 2
A hot start that pushes past engine temperature limits requires an inspection before the next flight.