Feet and kPa are not directly related.

What it does mean is that an altimeter, set to standard pressure (1013.2),
will read the altitude indicated, if the outside pressure at that altitude
is the amount given.

And the main reason for the common setting at and above FL 180 is to make
sure everyone up there is using the same standard, so they are separated
with relationship to each other.

Carleton
Former flight instructor

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Terry Simpson
Sent: Sunday, December 14, 2003 20:52
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:27849] RE: Airplane altitudes

>can we know what range of altitude the plane is actually at?

Near Norway right now, the pressure is 968 hPa. A pilot with an altimeter
set to the standard 1013 hPa therefore has a pressure error of 45 hPa. There
are about 10 m (30 ft) per 1 hPa. It will read '33 000 ft' when it is around
31 500 ft.

Over Portugal right now, the pressure 1033 hPa. A pilot with an altimeter
set to the standard 1013 hPa therefore has a pressure error of 20 hPa. It
will read '33 000 ft' when it is around 33 700 ft.



>How did you come up with 33 000 ft = 26.2 kPa?

http://mtp.jpl.nasa.gov/notes/altitude/altitude.html

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