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#11
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A Guy Called Tyketto wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Sam Spade wrote: A Guy Called Tyketto wrote: Not often. For the most, visual approaches are used over ILS approaches. When cleared for the visual approach, you won't be using autoland, as you won't be on an ILS approach, regardless of if you join the localizer and track it. You're still on the visual approach. That just isn't so. Jet aircraft are required to remain on, or above, the ILS G/S whether on an ILS approach or on a visual approach. At the company I worked for, failure to tune and identify the ILS for a visual approach to an ILS runway was a check-ride bust. This would be a company policy, no? Because it could still be done in any other aircraft outside your company. You must be another non-pilot? 91.129 A large or turbine-powered airplane approaching to land on a runway served by an instrument landing system (ILS), if the airplane is ILS equipped, shall fly that airplane at an altitude at or above the glide slope between the outer marker (or point of interception of glide slope, if compliance with the applicable distance from clouds criteria requires interception closer in) and the middle marker; and (3) An airplane approaching to land on a runway served by a visual approach slope indicator shall maintain an altitude at or above the glide slope until a lower altitude is necessary for a safe landing. |
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