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#41
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![]() "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... I was 17 miles EAST of the airport, intercepting the localizer. I was at 5000 feet, and just got "cleared for the approach". I was IFR. In that case, you can descend to 4000 immediately. But why descend to 4000 at all? At the time you were cleared for the approach you were about 900 feet below the glideslope. |
#42
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wrote in message ...
"Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:AYeAc.106416$3x.41993@attbi_s54... Regarding radar approach - no, radar vectors do not constitute a 'radar approach'. The term 'radar approach' refers to approaches using ASR and PAR. It's in the AIM but don't have the reference. It's also a fundamental part of being qualified to hold an instrument rating. Yup, well, I'm certainly aware of ASR and PAR approaches, though I'd momentarily forgotten that they're what the term 'radar approach' refers to, in contrast with 'radar vectors to an approach'. Now that my embarrassing lapse is remedied, I hope my qualifications are restored. Meanwhile, I'm still not certain I understand the example in AIM 5-4-7b. When the specified clearance is to "maintain 2000 until established on the localizer" (after being vectored to and cleared for the ILS approach), does the clearance actually mean not just until established on the localizer, but also "until established on a published segment" of the approach? That interpretation is suggested by the preceding caveats and the subsequent note in 5-4-7b. But if that's right, the phrasing of the clearance is confusing. --Gary |
#43
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![]() "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... From a purely instructor-centric point of view, I would prefer that controllers treat VFR practice approaches *exactly* like IFR ones. It's a training exercise; the more things you do differently from real life, the less effective the training is. So do your training under IFR. |
#44
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![]() "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote in message news ![]() Yes. So when you turn inbound on the hold you're not on a published part of the approach? For the purposes of altitude, only if you are receiving "vectors to final" Which he was in this case. |
#45
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![]() wrote in message ... 5-9-1 requirement to issue an altitude compatible with an NPA or an altitude below the G/S for a PA. "b. For a precision approach, at an altitude not above the glideslope/glidepath or below the minimum glideslope intercept altitude specified on the approach procedure chart. c. For a nonprecision approach, at an altitude which will allow descent in accordance with the published procedure." That's swell, but you said controllers were supposed to step down to the altitude shown on the chart. Where is that requirement? Even if he was vectored onto "final" 50 miles out, 5-9-4 leads to 5-9-1. This stuff is written to make the IAP flyable, not to provide loopholes for controllers. ;-) I think you'll find that 5-9-4 follows 5-9-1. |
#46
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Because I could descend to 4000 fast and then get slowed down.
"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... I was 17 miles EAST of the airport, intercepting the localizer. I was at 5000 feet, and just got "cleared for the approach". I was IFR. In that case, you can descend to 4000 immediately. But why descend to 4000 at all? At the time you were cleared for the approach you were about 900 feet below the glideslope. |
#47
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![]() "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... Because I could descend to 4000 fast and then get slowed down. Why do you want to do that? |
#48
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Because it would be much harder to get slowed down going down the
glideslope, trying to get below gear speed. "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... Because I could descend to 4000 fast and then get slowed down. Why do you want to do that? |
#49
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![]() "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... Because it would be much harder to get slowed down going down the glideslope, trying to get below gear speed. Well, why is that necessarily harder? Why do you want to go so slow so far out? Even if you do, why is it harder to slow down at 5000 than it is at 4000? |
#50
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At 5000 I was going to intercept the GS very shortly. I was going too fast
to put the gear down. Instead of incercepting the glideslope at 5,000 and following it down 700 feet a minute where it would be very difficult to get under gear speed, you can haul down to 4,000 feet (at 1000 - 1500fpm), then start slowing down. Then when you hit HAIGS, you step down to the next fix and then configure the airplane for GS intercept. It was in a C402 which can be difficult to slow down, without shock cooling the engines. if you intercept the glideslope high, it would be tough to get within gear speed without bringing the engines way back (shock cooling). "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "Chris Brooks" wrote in message ... Because it would be much harder to get slowed down going down the glideslope, trying to get below gear speed. Well, why is that necessarily harder? Why do you want to go so slow so far out? Even if you do, why is it harder to slow down at 5000 than it is at 4000? |
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