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#1
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message .net... "Stan Prevost" wrote in message ... From the P/CG: ================== FINAL APPROACH COURSE- A bearing/radial/track of an instrument approach leading to a runway or an extended runway centerline all without regard to distance. COURSE- a. The intended direction of flight in the horizontal plane measured in degrees from north. b. The ILS localizer signal pattern usually specified as the front course or the back course. c. The intended track along a straight, curved, or segmented MLS path. ================== Final Approach Course is not the same as Final Approach Segment. You've missed the point. Let's look at a couple of approaches at Titletown to illustrate. First, the ILS RWY 36: http://map.aeroplanner.com/plates/Fa.../00873IL36.PDF An aircraft is inbound from O'Hare, on initial contact it's instructed to turn ten degrees left and join the runway 36 localizer. It intercepts about thirty miles from the field and tracks inbound. No problem. Now look at the RNAV RWY 36 approach: http://map.aeroplanner.com/plates/Fa...s/00873R36.PDF Same situation, an aircraft is inbound from O'Hare, on initial contact it's instructed to turn ten degrees left and join the final approach course for the RNAV RWY 36. It crosses the extended final about thirty miles south of the field and continues on it's heading. There's nothing for it to intercept, nothing similar to a localizer that it can join. Of course there is something to intercept. There is the final approach course. By definition, it extends southward from the runway on a course of 182 degrees forever, to SENNA and beyond. RNAV/GPS equipment does not need a navaid signal overlying the FAC to allow me to navigate it. I can intercept and track that FAC with my GNS430 GPS, and it will even draw a magenta line for me on the map. However, I don't see any advantage to such vectors over a clearance direct SENNA. And if the MVA is higher than 2500, there can be a disadvantage. |
#2
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![]() "Stan Prevost" wrote in message ... Of course there is something to intercept. There is the final approach course. By definition, it extends southward from the runway on a course of 182 degrees forever, to SENNA and beyond. RNAV/GPS equipment does not need a navaid signal overlying the FAC to allow me to navigate it. I can intercept and track that FAC with my GNS430 GPS, and it will even draw a magenta line for me on the map. You're mistaken. |
#3
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message .net... "Stan Prevost" wrote in message ... Of course there is something to intercept. There is the final approach course. By definition, it extends southward from the runway on a course of 182 degrees forever, to SENNA and beyond. RNAV/GPS equipment does not need a navaid signal overlying the FAC to allow me to navigate it. I can intercept and track that FAC with my GNS430 GPS, and it will even draw a magenta line for me on the map. You're mistaken. About what? |
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