Definition
The ratio of the engine's available thrust to the total weight of the aircraft, expressed as a decimal or fraction (for example, 0.25 means the engine produces one pound of thrust for every four pounds of aircraft weight). It is a key indicator of an aircraft's acceleration capability during takeoff and its climb performance.
Plain English
How much pushing force the engine produces compared to how heavy the aircraft is. The bigger this number, the harder the aircraft can push itself forward and upward for its weight.
Context Anchor
Seen in takeoff performance discussions, especially when comparing how aircraft weight, engine output, and outside conditions affect acceleration and climb.
Derivation
“Thrust” comes from an older word meaning to push. “Ratio” means a comparison between two amounts. Together, the term points to the important idea: this is not just about how much thrust the aircraft has, but how that thrust compares with the weight it must move.
Why Pilots Care
A higher value produces shorter takeoff rolls, steeper climb angles, and better obstacle clearance margins.
Analogy
It is like pushing two carts with the same effort: the lighter cart speeds up more easily than the heavier one. The useful question is not just “How hard am I pushing?” but “How hard am I pushing compared with how much I have to move?”
Grounding Statement
A value greater than 0.3 is common for light aircraft; values above 1.0 allow sustained vertical climb.
Intuition Check
Do not read this as thrust alone or weight alone. It is the comparison between the airplane’s push and the airplane’s weight.
Example Sentence 1
On a hot day at a high-elevation airport, the engine produces less thrust, lowering the thrust-to-weight ratio and lengthening the takeoff roll.
Example Sentence 2
Hot weather and high altitude both lower the thrust-to-weight ratio and lengthen the required runway.