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![]() wrote in message oups.com... On May 10, 1:46 pm, John Godwin wrote: wrote roups.com: Landing. Aircraft while on final approach to land or while landing, have the right-of-way over other aircraft in flight or operating on the surface, except that they shall not take advantage of this rule to force and aircraft off the runway surface which has already landed... ... and I believe that the AIM defines "Final Approach" as: A flight path in the direction of landing along the extended runway centerline from the base leg to the runway. -- "FINAL APPROACH -- ICAO. That part of an instrument approach procedure which commences at the specified final approach fix or point, or where such fix or point is not specified: a. At the end of the last procedure turn, base turn or inbound turn or a racetrack procedure, if specified b. At the point of interception of the last track specified in the approach procedure; and ends at a point in the vicinity of an aerodrome from which: 1. A landing can be made; or 2. A missed approach procedure is initiated. FINAL APPROACH -- IFR. The flight path of an aircraft which is inbound to an airport on a final instrument approach course, beginning at the final approach fix or point and extending to the airport or the point where a circle-to-land maneuver or missed approach is executed." From that definition, "final approach" would be from the marker inbound on an ILS, or wherever the arriving traffic happens to get lined up with the final approach course. I'm sure you're aware that traffic arriving IFR is often vectored onto 5-10 mile final, so that "base leg" may have been flown, just 10 miles from where you're used to turning base-final. Faster, high performance aircraft often take time to slow down and transition from the terminal phase to approach and landing. So you are saying that 10 miles is where final approach begins? The AIM says you should complete your turn to final at least 1/4 mile from the runway; it does not specify a maximum distance. It also defines "final" as the term commonly used to mean that an aircraft is on the final approach course or is aligned with a landing area. |
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