Definition
The relationship between the position of the thrust lever and the actual thrust produced by a turbine engine. Unlike a piston engine throttle, a turbine engine's thrust does not change in a linear (one-to-one) way with thrust lever movement. A small movement near idle may produce little thrust change, while the same movement at higher settings can produce a large thrust change. Thrust also lags behind lever movement, especially when accelerating from low power settings.
Plain English
How the thrust lever position translates into actual engine thrust. In a jet, moving the lever does not give an instant or even response. The same amount of lever movement can produce very different thrust changes depending on where you are in the lever's range, and the engine takes time to catch up.
Context Anchor
Encountered when learning to control jet airplane power during taxi, takeoff, climb, approach, and landing.
Why Pilots Care
Prevents over- or under-controlling power settings that could lead to unstable airspeed or excessive fuel use.
Grounding Statement
At low power, a large lever movement may cause only a small thrust change; at higher power, a small lever movement may cause a much larger thrust change.
Intuition Check
Do not assume that moving the thrust lever halfway forward gives half of the available thrust. The lever position and the engine’s actual push do not always match in a straight-line way.
Example Sentence 1
During jet transition training, the instructor emphasized the thrust to thrust lever relationship, showing how the engine took several seconds to spool up after the lever was advanced.
Example Sentence 2
During descent the pilot retarded the thrust levers gradually, accounting for the thrust to thrust lever relationship so the airspeed remained stable without sudden drag increase.