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Alternate airports



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 30th 05, 02:40 AM
Peter Duniho
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"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
1...
If the destination does not have an instrument approach you must pick an
alternate.

If the destination has an instrument approach, then you don't need an
alternate unless the the weather is worse than 2000' ceiling or 3SM vis
+/1hr of the ETA. (ie if the forecast is worse than VFR then you need an
alternate).


The above is not "the process for choosing an alternate". It's the process
for deciding whether you NEED an alternate.

You can't pick any airports as an alternate. Only a few airports qualify
as an alternate.


Wrong. Any airport qualifies, as long as the forecast is for VFR conditions
from the descent from MEA all the way to the ground. Beyond that, lots of
airports have instrument approaches and thus qualify as an alternate under
lower forecast conditions. Even in IFR conditions, it's far from true that
"only a few airports qualify as an alternate".

Pete


  #2  
Old March 30th 05, 05:03 AM
Andrew Sarangan
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in
:

"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
1...
If the destination does not have an instrument approach you must pick
an alternate.

If the destination has an instrument approach, then you don't need an
alternate unless the the weather is worse than 2000' ceiling or 3SM
vis +/1hr of the ETA. (ie if the forecast is worse than VFR then you
need an alternate).


The above is not "the process for choosing an alternate". It's the
process for deciding whether you NEED an alternate.


But you have to first decide whether you need an alternate before going
to the trouble of picking one.


You can't pick any airports as an alternate. Only a few airports
qualify as an alternate.


Wrong. Any airport qualifies, as long as the forecast is for VFR
conditions from the descent from MEA all the way to the ground.
Beyond that, lots of airports have instrument approaches and thus
qualify as an alternate under lower forecast conditions. Even in IFR
conditions, it's far from true that "only a few airports qualify as an
alternate".

Pete


Any airport does not qualify. Most of those airports have "A-NA" on the
chart, which stands for "Alternate - Not Authorized".

The thread was a follow-up to 'flying to hamvention' thread. If you look
at the Dayton area, there aren't any airports within a short distance of
DAY that does not have an "A-NA" on it.





  #3  
Old March 30th 05, 07:06 AM
Peter Duniho
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"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
1...
But you have to first decide whether you need an alternate before going
to the trouble of picking one.


So?

Any airport does not qualify. Most of those airports have "A-NA" on the
chart, which stands for "Alternate - Not Authorized".


FAR 91.169 doesn't say anything about whether an alternate is authorized or
not. ANY airport is authorized, as long as VFR conditions from MEA to
landing are forecast.

The thread was a follow-up to 'flying to hamvention' thread. If you look
at the Dayton area, there aren't any airports within a short distance of
DAY that does not have an "A-NA" on it.


Ideally, an alternate would not be a short distance from your destination
anyway. After all, if the weather's too poor for landing at your
destination, often it will be at a nearby airport as well.

In any case, while something in that thread brought this to the original
poster's attention, the fact that he posted in a new thread implies to me
that he intended the question as a general one, not specific to that
particular destination.

Pete


  #4  
Old March 30th 05, 07:38 AM
Jose
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Ideally, an alternate would not be a short distance from your destination
anyway. After all, if the weather's too poor for landing at your
destination, often it will be at a nearby airport as well.


Not necessarily, IMHO. If the airport you are aiming for has high
minima (such as an NDB approach into the hills), and right nearby there
is an airport with low minima (such as an ILS), then under many weather
circumstances it is quite reasonable to use the neighboring airport as
an alternate.

OTOH, if the weather system is wide and threatens to possibly go low
(probably all over), then such a choice is... er... less optimal. You'd
want an airport (and the gas to get there) that is outside the weather
system.

The excercise of choosing a "legal" alternate has more to do with gas
than anything else. You need the gas to get there, and still fly almost
an hour at full cruise. Once you're in the air, and you actually =need=
an alternatative landing site, you can use any airport as that
alternative landing site, no matter what you filed in your flight plan
as a legal alternate, and no matter whether or not the airport is A-NA
on the charts. It just becomes an ordinary destination (albeit an
unplanned one)

Jose
--
Get high on gasoline: fly an airplane.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
  #5  
Old March 30th 05, 07:59 AM
Peter Duniho
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"Jose" wrote in message
. com...
Ideally, an alternate would not be a short distance from your destination
anyway. After all, if the weather's too poor for landing at your
destination, often it will be at a nearby airport as well.


Not necessarily, IMHO.


"Often" is not the same as "always". I already pointed out in my initial
reply that choosing an alternate is a complex exercise. It is pointless of
you to take me to task for a comment that was obviously not meant to cover
all the bases.

Pete


  #6  
Old March 30th 05, 04:16 PM
Jose
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"Often" is not the same as "always". I already pointed out in my initial
reply that choosing an alternate is a complex exercise. It is pointless of
you to take me to task for a comment that was obviously not meant to cover
all the bases.


Well, I wasn't "taking you to task". And my reply was not so much to
=you= as to the idea, often repeated as a mantra, that an alternate
should be outside the weather system to be really useful.

Jose
--
Get high on gasoline: fly an airplane.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
  #7  
Old March 30th 05, 08:37 PM
Andrew
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Peter Duniho wrote:
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
1...
But you have to first decide whether you need an alternate before

going
to the trouble of picking one.


So?

Any airport does not qualify. Most of those airports have "A-NA" on

the
chart, which stands for "Alternate - Not Authorized".


FAR 91.169 doesn't say anything about whether an alternate is

authorized or
not. ANY airport is authorized, as long as VFR conditions from MEA

to
landing are forecast.


OK, I may show my ignorance here. Isn't the approach procedures
constitute FAR 97? If a chart says 'Alternate Not Authorized', does it
not effectively disallow that airport from being listed as an
alternate?




The thread was a follow-up to 'flying to hamvention' thread. If you

look
at the Dayton area, there aren't any airports within a short

distance of
DAY that does not have an "A-NA" on it.


Ideally, an alternate would not be a short distance from your

destination
anyway. After all, if the weather's too poor for landing at your
destination, often it will be at a nearby airport as well.


I agree with you on that. Alternate should be selected where the wx is
likely to be significantly different.

  #8  
Old March 30th 05, 10:28 PM
Peter Duniho
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"Andrew" wrote in message
ups.com...
OK, I may show my ignorance here. Isn't the approach procedures
constitute FAR 97? If a chart says 'Alternate Not Authorized', does it
not effectively disallow that airport from being listed as an
alternate?


The "not authorized" applies to the approach, not the airport (as Michael
already pointed out). Forecast VFR conditions allow ANY airport to qualify
as an alternate under the default visual approach that exists at every
airport.

If you have an airport for which every approach says "not authorized", then
the visual approach is the only way to use that airport as an alternate.
But even in that case, the airport is not ruled out as an alternate, except
due to the weather forecast. It is otherwise eligible.

Note that airports without instrument approaches don't even have a chart
where one could find "A-NA" listed on it. As much as I hate to bring logic
into a discussion about the FARs, it just wouldn't make sense for an airport
with an instrument approach to not be authorized as an alternate (even under
VFR conditions), even as one without is automatically granted qualification
as an alternate (under 91.169).

So, to reiterate: having one or more approaches at an airport listed as
"A-NA" does not disqualify the airport. It just disqualifies the approach.
And the visual approach is always authorized (since it doesn't rely on any
monitored navigation equipment, and an area forecast is sufficient for using
for alternate decision-making).

Pete


  #9  
Old March 31st 05, 12:38 AM
Jim Burns
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Good job Pete.
Alternate airport, not alternate approach.

http://www.aopa.org/pilot/features/ii_9807.html
AOPA's article on the subject. It points out that FSS is a good place to
start asking for alternate suggestions as they have the forecasts right in
front of them.

When I file and am required to list an alternate, the first line of thought
that goes through my mind is "why" I need an alternate.... What weather
phenomenon has created the conditions, is it moving, which direction, and
how fast?

A wide area of like conditions forcast to remain the same or deteriorate
will usually tell me to pick an alternate that is enroute prior to my
original destination, however, if my original destination is in a low lying
area, near water and possibly surrounded by ground fog, an airport close by
but at a higher elevation may be the ticket. Same theory for lake effect
snow, go where it isn't! I'm usually better off filing an alternate further
inland than along the lake even though I will be going past my original
destination. I also try to pick alternate airports that have more services
than my original destination, if the weather is bad enough that I can't get
into Podunk on their VOR or GPS approach I know that the weather is worse
than forecast and my alternate will be the closest ILS with radar but
hopefully in the direction of more favorable conditions. Note that once
choosing the alternate the weather at the alternate then must meet the non
precision 800/2 and precision 600/2 rule. But to steal a line from AOPA's
article "It is also worth noting here that alternate minimums apply for
planning purposes alone. If you're airborne and heading to the alternate,
published minimums will now apply."

Jim


  #10  
Old March 30th 05, 05:53 PM
Michael
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Any airport does not qualify. Most of those airports have "A-NA" on
the
chart, which stands for "Alternate - Not Authorized".


Actually, that's not quite right. The A-NA refers to the approach, not
the airport. It is quite common to have some approaches to a given
airport marked A-NA, and others not so marked. In that case, the
'best' approach among those not marked A-NA is used to determine
alternate minima for that airport. If all approaches are marked A-NA,
then the only remaining approach is a visual. The alternate minima for
a visual are weather sufficient for descent from MEA to a landing under
basic VFR. Those minima are always authorized, so any airport is an
authorized alternate - the only question is what the alternate minima
will be. There are airports where the alternate minima require 10,000'
ceilings (mountain MEA's and valley airports will do that) but they are
still authorized.

I agree with you that there are not any airports within a short
distance of DAY that would be useful alternates in conditions that
would actually require you to file an alternate for DAY.

Michael

 




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