Definition
A runway condition and associated handling hazard in which standing water on the runway surface causes the tires of a landing or rolling aircraft to lose contact with the pavement. Dynamic hydroplaning occurs when the forward speed of the tire is high enough that water cannot escape from beneath it, so a wedge of water lifts the tire off the runway. Once hydroplaning begins, the tire stops rotating, braking action becomes ineffective, and directional control through nosewheel or main-gear steering is lost. The minimum speed at which dynamic hydroplaning can begin is approximated by the formula 9 times the square root of the tire pressure (in psi) for a smooth or slick runway, giving the speed in knots.
Plain English
When there is enough water on the runway, a fast-moving tire can ride up on top of it like a water ski instead of rolling on the pavement. When that happens, brakes do not slow the airplane and the rudder pedals cannot steer it on the ground.
Context Anchor
Seen in takeoff and landing planning, especially when deciding whether a wet runway is safe for the airplane’s speed, weight, and stopping distance.
Derivation
Hydroplaning combines hydro- (Greek hudor, water) with plane (Latin planus, flat or level surface, also the root of aeroplane). The image is of a tire planing across the surface of the water rather than cutting through it, the same way a speedboat rises onto its hull at speed.
Why Pilots Care
Failure to recognize and avoid dynamic hydroplaning conditions can cause loss of directional control and extended stopping distances on wet runways.
Analogy
It is similar to a car hydroplaning on a flooded road: the tire is no longer gripping the pavement well because a layer of water is carrying part of the load.
Grounding Statement
Above a certain speed, a thin layer of water on the runway can lift the tires off the pavement, leaving the airplane sliding rather than rolling.
Intuition Check
Do not assume a wet runway only means “a little slippery.” With enough water and speed, the tire can lose firm contact with the runway, not just lose some grip.
Example Sentence 1
After the heavy shower passed over the field, the instructor briefed dynamic hydroplaning and recommended waiting for the standing water to drain before attempting the landing.
Example Sentence 2
After heavy rain the tower reported standing water, so the crew delayed takeoff until the runway dried enough to eliminate the risk of dynamic hydroplaning.