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![]() "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... One of the cool things about WAAS is the ability to fly a synthetic glideslope on a non-precision approach. I'd much rather follow a needle smoothly down to MDA than dive-and-drive through a couple of stepdowns, even if the MDA is still the same 500 AGL or whatever. Problem with a smooth descent is that when you arrive at the sectors MDA, you have immediately start down again rather than taking a few moments to sift things out. Stable approaches were build for the heavy metal/turbine crowd. http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182091-1.html Pelican's Perch #24: Sloppy, Sorry VNAV Flying a non-precision approach has traditionally been a "Dive and Drive" affair in which the pilot descends rapidly to the MDA or step-down altitude and then levels off. Recently, however, pilots of aircraft equipped with glass cockpit FMS systems or VNAV-capable GPS receivers have been encouraged to fly such approaches using a constant descent path. There's even a buzzword for this: CANPA (constant-angle non-precision approach), and these calculated pseudo-glideslopes are now starting to show up on Jeppesen approach plates. AVweb's John Deakin thinks this is a bad idea, one that will result in a lot more missed approaches and perhaps even some accidents. Deakin explains why, and makes a compelling case for flying non-precision approaches the traditional, old-fashioned way that God and Cap'n Jepp intended. ---------------------------------------------- |
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