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#11
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On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 22:23:48 GMT, "C Kingsbury"
wrote: "zatatime" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 17:02:56 -0400, "Morgans" wrote: When are GPS approaches for places like this, and thousands of others going to be available? Why would a GPS be better than a Localizer/DME. I doubt a GPS approach would have had any lower minimums than the LOC did, so I'm not sure how that would have helped in this situation. LPV approaches (GPS+WAAS with lateral and vertical guidance) can I believe get you down to 250' and 1-1/2, which is a lot lower than a GPS (LNAV) approach and quite close to ILS minima. Second, an LPV approach should be comparable to an ILS in terms of difficulty to fly: just configure the airplane and keep the needles in the donut. By bringing planes down on a stabilized approach all the way to MDA you eliminate a number of opportunities to screw things up. None of which may have been responsible for this particular crash, but the overall statistics strongly suggest that better approaches mean safer approaches. -cwk. I was thinking about a standard GPS (LNAV) approach, but fully agree on the LPV type of approach adding more safety and ability. I'm not real familiar with those, but aren't they fairly new, and thre's only one GPS that is certified for them at this point? I'm sure the way the teams spend money, they'll all have them as soon as possible, but will there be enough approaches to make it money well spent? Seems like its still a few years off to me, but again I admit I don't have the lo down on them. Thanks for the explanation. z |
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#12
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#13
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#14
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"G Farris" wrote in message ... In article , says... There was nothing difficult about these approaches. The LOC at that airport was quite simple. If they cannot read the chart for a LOC approach, what makes you think that any new approach will be better? This was a non-precision approach at or below minimums to an airport with terrain issues in at least one quadrant, so it is not without difficulties, And what difficulties are those? It is a simple approach. If you cannot see the airport, you execute the missed. My point was that how would a GPS approach help, there are already a few approaches into the airport. What makes you think that if they had a precision approach they would have been able to fly it if they failed to fly the existing one correctly? They could not have been all that familiar with the airport if they flew into the highest terrain published on the chart... I think you have to reconsider your position. I am not damning them - I think it is a shame, but when people spout things like adding another approach to an airport would have saved these people I wonder why they think that. There is nothing difficult int he approach. Now, it is certainly possible that something happened to cause this crash, but I am not going to speculate on that, all I stated was that they clearly did not follow the instructions on the approach chart. If you feel that is damning them, then that is your business. I can't say that they followed the chart, because clearly they did not, otherwise they would not have crashed into terrain. Your ill admonishment to me is unhelpful. No one has yet pointed out why another approach to this airport would be useful or how it would have helped in this case. The bottome line is that you still have to execute the approach and if they did not exdcute this one correctly, what makes you think they will execute a different one correctly? at least in the judgement department. Given this was an experienced, well-trained crew, familiar with the airport and operating top-notch equipment, I think it's likely there is a missing piece in the puzzle, which we will learn from the factual investigation. Your summary, damning report that the crew "cannot read" a LOC approach chart is unsubstantiated, and I believe unhelpful. G Faris |
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#15
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"Richard Hertz" no one@no one.com wrote in message et... but when people spout things like adding another approach to an airport would have saved these people I wonder why they think that. Well, I'm the original spouter and I approve this spouting. I thought my first post made the point pretty clearly but I'll elaborate here. What we are dealing with here is by nature a game of generalities. Every accident is by definition unique, but looking at broad patterns certain unmistakable trends emerge. Among those trends is the fact that precision approaches are safer than non-precision ones. Stabilized-descent approaches are likewise preferable to step-downs, and several of the major airlines got approval for FMS-based vertical-guidance for non-precision approaches starting a few years ago. LPV approaches provide a capability that is on its face almost equal to an ILS, and have all the inherent advantages of a stabilized-descent precision approach. They provide better guidance in all 3 dimensions and simply allow fewer opportunities for the pilot to screw up. in this case. The bottome line is that you still have to execute the approach and if they did not exdcute this one correctly, what makes you think they will execute a different one correctly? This is a red herring. My point is not to glom onto this case so specifically but rather to make the broad point that since precision approaches are generally safer, we should push for more LPV approaches as a safety issue. -cwk. |
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#16
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And I believe that your assertion that it was a "well trained crew operating top-notch equipment" is nothing more than speculation. I tried corporate jet flying for one month after my retirement from PanAm. I could write a book about the southern good-ole-boy corporate flying culture. One example...there was not a check-list in either the Sabreliner or Diamond, and no-one cared. My parting words...."You assholes aren't going to kill me". Bob Moore I think the same could be said about some air carrier pilots as well. |
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#17
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"C Kingsbury" wrote in message link.net... "Richard Hertz" no one@no one.com wrote in message et... but when people spout things like adding another approach to an airport would have saved these people I wonder why they think that. Well, I'm the original spouter and I approve this spouting. I thought my first post made the point pretty clearly but I'll elaborate here. What we are dealing with here is by nature a game of generalities. Every accident is by definition unique, but looking at broad patterns certain unmistakable trends emerge. Yes, that pilots make mistakes and many are unprepared and ill-trained. I do not mean that of these two pilots, bet certainly many are. Among those trends is the fact that precision approaches are safer than non-precision ones. Stabilized-descent approaches are likewise preferable to step-downs, and several of the major airlines got approval for FMS-based vertical-guidance for non-precision approaches starting a few years ago. I do not see how they are inherently "safer." I prefer them - they let me get closer to the ground before having to make a decision. A decision that was not made by the plane in question. LPV approaches provide a capability that is on its face almost equal to an ILS, and have all the inherent advantages of a stabilized-descent precision approach. They provide better guidance in all 3 dimensions and simply allow fewer opportunities for the pilot to screw up. Better than a localizer in that dimension? The localizer is not a bad guidance system. They failed to get to the appropriate height. in this case. The bottome line is that you still have to execute the approach and if they did not exdcute this one correctly, what makes you think they will execute a different one correctly? This is a red herring. My point is not to glom onto this case so specifically but rather to make the broad point that since precision approaches are generally safer, we should push for more LPV approaches as a safety issue. Not a red herring at all. Precision approaches are "safer" if flown correctly, but since this crew was not able to fly the localizer and missed properly, how can they be expected to fly any other one? I responded to this other person who objected to me doing what he thought was speaking ill of the dead. Again, I see no reason to belive that in this case a precision approach would have been any better. They ran into a clearly plotted bit of terrain that is 2000 feet below the approved height for that sector/part of the approach. -cwk. |
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#18
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"Richard Hertz" no one@no one.com wrote in message et... "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... john smith wrote: "Taking the chance on being delayed in an airport just won't work," Green said. "You have to be there Friday morning for practice or you miss practice. Miss practice, and they don't let you attempt to qualify." Sounds like a recipe for "gottagetthereitis" to me. Hardly - when you are talking about the pilots, equipment and approaches they have at their disposal. This is much different than some private pilot wanting to beat home a lowering cloud deck at night or trying to beat a t storm... Not at all different. No matter how good the pilots, equipment, and approach equipment is , it can still be insufficient to successfully execute the approach and be in a position to land when the runway pops into view. So, do we go a little below posted minimums, 'cause we might still break through? If we pop out high, do we steepen our descent and try to make what's left of the runway???? Do we attempt to keep the runway in sight with a below-limits circle???... (Everybody here tell me that you have never tried one or more of the above and managed it successfully, and if you did it once, why not again). Remember, practice (or qualifying, or photo-shoot, or...) starts in an hour.... If we overshoot, we may not do any better on the next try and will have to divert. Different conditions, maybe, but still the same potential for "have-to-get-there". More dangerous than the Cessna beating the cloud deck, because the tolerance for error is much smaller, and the financial consequence much greater. |
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#19
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Richard Hertz wrote:
"C Kingsbury" wrote in message link.net... "Richard Hertz" no one@no one.com wrote in message .net... but when people spout things like adding another approach to an airport would have saved these people I wonder why they think that. Well, I'm the original spouter and I approve this spouting. I thought my first post made the point pretty clearly but I'll elaborate here. What we are dealing with here is by nature a game of generalities. Every accident is by definition unique, but looking at broad patterns certain unmistakable trends emerge. Yes, that pilots make mistakes and many are unprepared and ill-trained. I do not mean that of these two pilots, bet certainly many are. Among those trends is the fact that precision approaches are safer than non-precision ones. Stabilized-descent approaches are likewise preferable to step-downs, and several of the major airlines got approval for FMS-based vertical-guidance for non-precision approaches starting a few years ago. I do not see how they are inherently "safer." I prefer them - they let me get closer to the ground before having to make a decision. A decision that was not made by the plane in question. LPV approaches provide a capability that is on its face almost equal to an ILS, and have all the inherent advantages of a stabilized-descent precision approach. They provide better guidance in all 3 dimensions and simply allow fewer opportunities for the pilot to screw up. Better than a localizer in that dimension? The localizer is not a bad guidance system. They failed to get to the appropriate height. in this case. The bottome line is that you still have to execute the approach and if they did not exdcute this one correctly, what makes you think they will execute a different one correctly? This is a red herring. My point is not to glom onto this case so specifically but rather to make the broad point that since precision approaches are generally safer, we should push for more LPV approaches as a safety issue. Not a red herring at all. Precision approaches are "safer" if flown correctly, but since this crew was not able to fly the localizer and missed properly, how can they be expected to fly any other one? I responded to this other person who objected to me doing what he thought was speaking ill of the dead. Again, I see no reason to belive that in this case a precision approach would have been any better. They ran into a clearly plotted bit of terrain that is 2000 feet below the approved height for that sector/part of the approach. I agree that precision approaches preferable to nonprecision approaches, but the bottom line is that actually flying either type of approach is more difficult than necessary, given what current technology makes possible. The amount of effort necessary to fly approaches safely in IMC even under normal conditions is very high. It is way too easy to lose situational awareness. What we need is to demand faster development and adoption of synthetic vision and Highway in the Sky symbology in cockpits. I've flown extremely complicated approaches (curving around mountains, etc.) down to very low minimums in a research simulator equipped with Rockwell Colins' future synthetic vision system. It turned hard IMC to a bright sunny, day VFR pleasure flight, with a display that showed where all terrain and obstruction were. Folow the boxes and don't fly into anything brown that looks like a mountain, and you're fine. The flight management system that drives the displays depends on solid state Attitude Heading Reference System (solid state gyros) and precision GPS (GPS + WAAS) but also integrates barometric altimeter and terrestrial navigation aids. The GPS, however, is generally the most precise navigation instrument available. The technology is available, and the faster we get it into cockpits the more lives we'll save. I find it unfortunate that we still have the attitude that training alone will solve all our problems. The accident record clearly shows that even well trained crews can lose situational awareness in perfectly healthy airplanes. The fact is that there are human factor issues involved in just about every fatal IMC accident, and THOSE HAVE BEEN SOLVED with synthetic vision. There should be no technological hurdles to implementation of this technology in even the smallest GA aircraft. In fact, I can foresee the Garmin G-X000 replacing the dirt and sky attitude indicator with a SV display. It would be a matter of changing software. A change that will save lives! -Aviv |
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#20
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"Aviv Hod" wrote in message ... Richard Hertz wrote: "C Kingsbury" wrote in message link.net... "Richard Hertz" no one@no one.com wrote in message v.net... but when people spout things like adding another approach to an airport would have saved these people I wonder why they think that. Well, I'm the original spouter and I approve this spouting. I thought my first post made the point pretty clearly but I'll elaborate here. What we are dealing with here is by nature a game of generalities. Every accident is by definition unique, but looking at broad patterns certain unmistakable trends emerge. Yes, that pilots make mistakes and many are unprepared and ill-trained. I do not mean that of these two pilots, bet certainly many are. Among those trends is the fact that precision approaches are safer than non-precision ones. Stabilized-descent approaches are likewise preferable to step-downs, and several of the major airlines got approval for FMS-based vertical-guidance for non-precision approaches starting a few years ago. I do not see how they are inherently "safer." I prefer them - they let me get closer to the ground before having to make a decision. A decision that was not made by the plane in question. LPV approaches provide a capability that is on its face almost equal to an ILS, and have all the inherent advantages of a stabilized-descent precision approach. They provide better guidance in all 3 dimensions and simply allow fewer opportunities for the pilot to screw up. Better than a localizer in that dimension? The localizer is not a bad guidance system. They failed to get to the appropriate height. in this case. The bottome line is that you still have to execute the approach and if they did not exdcute this one correctly, what makes you think they will execute a different one correctly? This is a red herring. My point is not to glom onto this case so specifically but rather to make the broad point that since precision approaches are generally safer, we should push for more LPV approaches as a safety issue. Not a red herring at all. Precision approaches are "safer" if flown correctly, but since this crew was not able to fly the localizer and missed properly, how can they be expected to fly any other one? I responded to this other person who objected to me doing what he thought was speaking ill of the dead. Again, I see no reason to belive that in this case a precision approach would have been any better. They ran into a clearly plotted bit of terrain that is 2000 feet below the approved height for that sector/part of the approach. I agree that precision approaches preferable to nonprecision approaches, but the bottom line is that actually flying either type of approach is more difficult than necessary, given what current technology makes possible. The amount of effort necessary to fly approaches safely in IMC even under normal conditions is very high. It is way too easy to lose situational awareness. What we need is to demand faster development and adoption of synthetic vision and Highway in the Sky symbology in cockpits. I've flown extremely complicated approaches (curving around mountains, etc.) down to very low minimums in a research simulator equipped with Rockwell Colins' future synthetic vision system. It turned hard IMC to a bright sunny, day VFR pleasure flight, with a display that showed where all terrain and obstruction were. Folow the boxes and don't fly into anything brown that looks like a mountain, and you're fine. The flight management system that drives the displays depends on solid state Attitude Heading Reference System (solid state gyros) and precision GPS (GPS + WAAS) but also integrates barometric altimeter and terrestrial navigation aids. The GPS, however, is generally the most precise navigation instrument available. The technology is available, and the faster we get it into cockpits the more lives we'll save. I find it unfortunate that we still have the attitude that training alone will solve all our problems. The accident record clearly shows that even well trained crews can lose situational awareness in perfectly healthy airplanes. The fact is that there are human factor issues involved in just about every fatal IMC accident, and THOSE HAVE BEEN SOLVED with synthetic vision. There should be no technological hurdles to implementation of this technology in even the smallest GA aircraft. In fact, I can foresee the Garmin G-X000 replacing the dirt and sky attitude indicator with a SV display. It would be a matter of changing software. A change that will save lives! -Aviv And who is going to pay for your silver bullet? Is this stuff so reliable that you can ignore failure? What happens when it fails? Your argument about "training alone will solve all our problems" can be thrown right back at you with "Do you really think that ,insert technology/methodology of your choice will solve all our problems?" You seem to claim "synthetic vision" will do it. I have yet to be convinced, but perhaps it will. Regardless, I was only stating, contrary to previous posters, another approach to the airport would not have helped - the pilots (for whatever reason) picked the the worst place to fly and found the highest piece of terrain on the approach chart and flew into it. That is a problem. It could not be solved by adding more approaches and spending more money on flight testing another GPS approach. |
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