Air Miles Calculator logo

How far is Pekanbaru from Learmonth?

The distance between Learmonth (RAAF Base Learmonth) and Pekanbaru (Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport) is 1778 miles / 2861 kilometers / 1545 nautical miles.

RAAF Base Learmonth – Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport

Distance arrow
1778
Miles
Distance arrow
2861
Kilometers
Distance arrow
1545
Nautical miles

Search flights

Distance from Learmonth to Pekanbaru

There are several ways to calculate the distance from Learmonth to Pekanbaru. Here are two standard methods:

Vincenty's formula (applied above)
  • 1777.946 miles
  • 2861.327 kilometers
  • 1544.993 nautical miles

Vincenty's formula calculates the distance between latitude/longitude points on the earth's surface using an ellipsoidal model of the planet.

Haversine formula
  • 1784.458 miles
  • 2871.807 kilometers
  • 1550.652 nautical miles

The haversine formula calculates the distance between latitude/longitude points assuming a spherical earth (great-circle distance – the shortest distance between two points).

How long does it take to fly from Learmonth to Pekanbaru?

The estimated flight time from RAAF Base Learmonth to Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport is 3 hours and 51 minutes.

Flight carbon footprint between RAAF Base Learmonth (LEA) and Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport (PKU)

On average, flying from Learmonth to Pekanbaru generates about 198 kg of CO2 per passenger, and 198 kilograms equals 437 pounds (lbs). The figures are estimates and include only the CO2 generated by burning jet fuel.

Map of flight path from Learmonth to Pekanbaru

See the map of the shortest flight path between RAAF Base Learmonth (LEA) and Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport (PKU).

Airport information

Origin RAAF Base Learmonth
City: Learmonth
Country: Australia Flag of Australia
IATA Code: LEA
ICAO Code: YPLM
Coordinates: 22°14′8″S, 114°5′20″E
Destination Sultan Syarif Kasim II International Airport
City: Pekanbaru
Country: Indonesia Flag of Indonesia
IATA Code: PKU
ICAO Code: WIBB
Coordinates: 0°27′38″N, 101°26′41″E