A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Instrument Flight Rules
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Garmin 430 and ILS



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old February 13th 05, 05:08 PM
Greg Esres
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Garmin 430 and ILS

The Garmin 430 documentation says that you can use the GPS for course
guidance on an ILS/LOC up until the final approach fix. Where exactly
does the approval for this come from? My inclination would have been
that in absence of an overlay, you could not use GPS anywhere after
the IAF.


Also, assuming this approval is legit, shouldn't this extend to a
non-overlay VOR approach?

  #2  
Old February 13th 05, 05:28 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Greg Esres wrote:

The Garmin 430 documentation says that you can use the GPS for course
guidance on an ILS/LOC up until the final approach fix. Where exactly
does the approval for this come from? My inclination would have been
that in absence of an overlay, you could not use GPS anywhere after
the IAF.


Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach sensitivity
until the beginning of a final approach segment for either a stand-alone
RNAV approach or an approved overlay.

So, you do not need localizer guidance until the P-FAF for an ILS approach
or the NPA FAF for a localizer approach. Because overlay is not approved
for a localizer, the localizer itself has to be used for the ILS or
localizer final approach segment.

The "flip-side" is also true, which is what Garmin states.


Also, assuming this approval is legit, shouldn't this extend to a
non-overlay VOR approach?


True, it could, but the vendors haven't seen that as a real-world issue.


  #3  
Old February 13th 05, 06:02 PM
Greg Esres
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach
sensitivity until the beginning of a final approach segment

I was sure they were, but I'm concerned about how to demonstrate this
correctness to others. The AIM says nothing about this.

I accept that flying the localizer outbound for the PT does not
require approach sensitivity and that the protected area is wide on
the initial segment, but I shouldn't have to know these things in
order to know what I can do with this box.

I'm mostly concerned with checkrides. Is there anything other than
Garmin documentation that can demonstrate this is a legal thing to do?

" non-overlay VOR approach?" True, it could, but the vendors
haven't seen that as a real-world issue.

I haven't done this in the real airplane, but on the simulator, the
box will advise changing to Vloc once established on the inbound
course of a VOR, but will not switch over. In fact, it goes down to
approach sensitivity, but doesn't indicate approach RAIM.

Would you argue that using the GPS for course guidance up to this
point is legal?


Thanks!
  #4  
Old February 13th 05, 06:17 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Greg Esres wrote:

Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach
sensitivity until the beginning of a final approach segment

I was sure they were, but I'm concerned about how to demonstrate this
correctness to others. The AIM says nothing about this.

I accept that flying the localizer outbound for the PT does not
require approach sensitivity and that the protected area is wide on
the initial segment, but I shouldn't have to know these things in
order to know what I can do with this box.

I'm mostly concerned with checkrides. Is there anything other than
Garmin documentation that can demonstrate this is a legal thing to do?

" non-overlay VOR approach?" True, it could, but the vendors
haven't seen that as a real-world issue.

I haven't done this in the real airplane, but on the simulator, the
box will advise changing to Vloc once established on the inbound
course of a VOR, but will not switch over. In fact, it goes down to
approach sensitivity, but doesn't indicate approach RAIM.

Would you argue that using the GPS for course guidance up to this
point is legal?


If you can retrieve it from a current database with an IFR
approach-approved GPS, it is legal to use. You will note the warning
message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach.

  #5  
Old February 13th 05, 07:21 PM
Greg Esres
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up
and ILS approach.

Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note
says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs
to come from the underlying navaid at all times.

That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty
explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the
permissiveness of the manual.



  #6  
Old February 13th 05, 09:00 PM
Peter Clark
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 19:21:07 GMT, Greg Esres
wrote:

You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up
and ILS approach.

Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note
says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs
to come from the underlying navaid at all times.

That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty
explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the
permissiveness of the manual.


Same issues I'm attempting to work through in my thread "Yet more GPS
substitution questions", cept I was looking at a VOR/DME. I'll just
merge into this one - thanks.

  #7  
Old February 13th 05, 10:14 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Greg Esres wrote:

You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up
and ILS approach.

Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note
says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs
to come from the underlying navaid at all times.

That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty
explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the
permissiveness of the manual.


You should discuss that with Garmin. The restriction is meant to apply
to the final approach segment only. It doesn't bother me because I know
it's the same for FMS/LNAV in a 777 or a Garmin 430 in a Cessna 182.
You are using terminal mode except for the final approach segment.

  #8  
Old February 16th 05, 01:35 AM
Greg Esres
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

If you can retrieve it from a current database with an IFR
approach-approved GPS, it is legal to use. You will note the warning
message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach.

I checked with the AIM again, and what it says seems on point:

-------Snip------
Do not attempt to fly an approach unless the procedure is...identified
as "GPS" on the approach chart...The navigation database may contain
information about nonoverlay approach procedures that is intended to
be used to enhance position orientation, generally by providing a map,
while flying these approaches using conventional NAVAIDs.
-------Snip-----

Garmin's position, as you know, is that you aren't "established" on
the approach until you're on final. Are you aware of any
justification for this position at all?

(Yes, I have asked Garmin the same thing, but haven't received an
answer yet.)
  #9  
Old February 16th 05, 09:01 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Greg Esres wrote:

If you can retrieve it from a current database with an IFR
approach-approved GPS, it is legal to use. You will note the warning
message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach.

I checked with the AIM again, and what it says seems on point:

-------Snip------
Do not attempt to fly an approach unless the procedure is...identified
as "GPS" on the approach chart...The navigation database may contain
information about nonoverlay approach procedures that is intended to
be used to enhance position orientation, generally by providing a map,
while flying these approaches using conventional NAVAIDs.
-------Snip-----

Garmin's position, as you know, is that you aren't "established" on
the approach until you're on final. Are you aware of any
justification for this position at all?


I think I have covered it, but let me try again: for purposes of TERPS
and regulatory requirements to be established, an IAP can begin as early
as a feeder fix (before an IAF, where there is a feeder fix).

For purposes of the specifications for IFR GPS avionics, the "approach" is
*only* the final approach segment. The other segments are terminal
routes, and use terminal CDI scaling/sensitivity/RAIM. Only the approach
mode uses approach scaling/sensitivity/RAIM.

You won't find a regulation that says this, nor will you find an FAA
document that proclaims this to pilots. Nonetheless, all TSO-C129
avionics and all higher-end LNAV/FMS platform treat the final approach
segment as the "approach," per se.

 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:17 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.