aterpster
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aterpster
Appears in today's Aviation Week eBulletin. Article appeared in BCA.
http://www.terps.com/be1900/padn.pdf
http://www.terps.com/be1900/padn.pdf
I wonder what the "ask for direct, fly what you get" crowd has to say about this.
dtuuri
Did you stop reading after you read the first line about asking for direct to the IAF? Because the rest of the report would have explained how going direct had nothing to do with the incident.
Cleared to ZEDAG transition for RNAV one-nine approach into Dillingham. Maintain [Center controller dialing the DLG FSS] two thousand until a published segment of the approach Ace Air fifty-one.
They "flew what they got".Did you stop reading after you read the first line about asking for direct to the IAF? Because the rest of the report would have explained how going direct had nothing to do with the incident.
Note the TWO designators for one aiport: DLG and PADL...they do that in Alaska.
In Illinois too; ORD and KORD. In 48 more states as well.
I thought ORD was the designator for the VOR and KORD the designator for the airport?
I used this as an example of controllers clearing aircraft to fly charted procedures below the minimum charted altitudes at the most recent ATPAC last week. I personally received two clearances in the last few weeks to holding patterns at altitudes below the charted procedure minimum.
From the report, the aircraft was approximately 30 NM from the IAF fix and at or just inside the boundary of the TAA segment and at 5900 MSL. They received the clearance:
Cleared to ZEDAG transition for RNAV one-nine approach into Dillingham. Maintain [Center controller dialing the DLG FSS] two thousand until a published segment of the approach Ace Air fifty-one.
At the point the aircraft was at, the TAA charted minimum segment altitude is 5400 MSL and the aircraft was already on a published segment of the approach as the entire TAA segment is considered a published segment.
I thought ORD was the designator for the VOR and KORD the designator for the airport?
Nope. ORD is the FAA designator, KORD is the ICAO designator.
Look at Maui: PHOG and OGG.
That clearance that was given was worded in a way that would suggest the controller seriously thought 2,000 was safe when he issued it.
The NTSB didn't buy that, nor did FAA management. The ATC handbook is quite clear, too.The crap about how he thought the airplane would do this or that, etc, etc, sounds like an attempt at covering his/her rather serious mistake.
Yep, especially since they were well below the published TAA for the approach they had requested and been granted.Even with that mistake, the crew shouldn't have flown the plane into the ground cleared to do so or not.
That clearance that was given was worded in a way that would suggest the controller seriously thought 2,000 was safe when he issued it.
The crap about how he thought the airplane would do this or that, etc, etc, sounds like an attempt at covering his/her rather serious mistake.
Even with that mistake, the crew shouldn't have flown the plane into the ground cleared to do so or not.
Technically, both are right. From Order 7350.8Y:
"At the same location, the same identifier may be assigned to one navigational aid (which must be located within the airport boundary), to the airport, to a manned air traffic control facility, and to an aviation weather station on the airport."
dtuuri
I'm not trying to shift more blame onto the controller than he deserves, but how could he expect the pilot to climb to 4300 to enter the hold if he hadn't noticed and wasn't aware that the plane had descended below 5400?
At the time the clearance was issued, the aircraft was at 5900 MSL and reported to be 30 NM from the IAF. This puts the aircraft on a published segment of the approach with a minimum of 5400 feet, so "Maintain [Center controller dialing the DLG FSS] two thousand until a published segment of the approach Ace Air fifty-one" does not make any sense and points to the controller having a lack of knowledge of a TAA, or just as bad, clearing an aircraft to an altitude below the minimum charted altitude for an approach segment.
About 6 min. later, the pilot requested to enter the holding pattern while they checked on runway conditions on another radio frequency, and the controller cleared them to hold “as published.” At the time of the pilot’s request, the airplane was at an altitude of about 2,200 ft. MSL.
Yep, especially since they were well below the published TAA for the approach they had requested and been granted.
Where is the TAA published? Is that different from the MSA that appears on the approach plate?
The TAA is on the approach plate, it's what you're calling the MSA.
That is sort of what I assumed. AIM 5-4-5 (c) deals with MSA, whereas 5-4-5(d) deals with TAA. That tells me that they are separate and distinct.
I thought it was "maintain at or above two thousand until established...", but otherwise I agree. My point was that the report has the controller seeming to talk out of both sides of his mouth, on the one hand not being aware that the aircraft had descended, and on the other expecting the aircraft to climb to an altitude lower than the one the controller claimed to have thought the aircraft was still at. The account doesn't make sense, and makes the controller look as if he is trying to weasel out of something. If that's the case then the controller deserves to be nailed to the cross, but otherwise, there is something missing from the report.At the time the clearance was issued, the aircraft was at 5900 MSL and reported to be 30 NM from the IAF. This puts the aircraft on a published segment of the approach with a minimum of 5400 feet, so "Maintain [Center controller dialing the DLG FSS] two thousand until a published segment of the approach Ace Air fifty-one" does not make any sense and points to the controller having a lack of knowledge of a TAA, or just as bad, clearing an aircraft to an altitude below the minimum charted altitude for an approach segment.
I thought it was "maintain at or above two thousand until established...", but otherwise I agree. My point was that the report has the controller seeming to talk out of both sides of his mouth, on the one hand not being aware that the aircraft had descended, and on the other expecting the aircraft to climb to an altitude lower than the one the controller claimed to have thought the aircraft was still at. The account doesn't make sense, and makes the controller look as if he is trying to weasel out of something. If that's the case then the controller deserves to be nailed to the cross, but otherwise, there is something missing from the report.
A postaccident review of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) radar data and radio communication recordings revealed that, about 0803, the pilot requested the RNAV/GPS runway 19 approach to DLG and asked for routing directly to ZEDAG, the initial approach fix (IAF). At the time of the pilot's request, the airplane was about 30 miles southeast of ZEDAG at an altitude of about 5,900 feet mean sea level (msl). The on-duty Anchorage Air Route Traffic Control Center (ARTCC) radar controller cleared the airplane to fly directly to ZEDAG followed by the ZEDAG transition and the RNAV/GPS runway 19 approach. The controller told the pilot to maintain an altitude "at or above 2,000 feet msl until established on a published segment of the approach." The pilot read back, "Maintain two thousand until a published segment of the approach." About 6 minutes later, as the airplane descended toward the IAF, the pilot requested to enter the holding pattern while checking on runway conditions on another radio frequency, and the controller granted the request. At the time of the pilot's request, the airplane was at an altitude of about 2,200 feet msl. The airplane subsequently disappeared from the controller's radar display, and all contact with the flight was lost.
The clearance was a quote from the NTSB report. It was the initial clearance for the approach.
"Cleared to ZEDAG transition for RNAV one-nine approach into Dillingham. Maintain [Center controller dialing the DLG FSS] two thousand until a published segment of the approach Ace Air fifty-one."
This was issued at or near the TAA boundary, again according to the NTSB report, see quote from the report:
John, from your own cite of the NTSB report:
"The controller told the pilot to maintain an altitude "at or above 2,000 feet msl until established on a published segment of the approach." The pilot read back, "Maintain two thousand until a published segment of the approach."
Multiple links in this accident chain.
Question: would vigilance by the crew to RTFM (chart) been sufficient to break the accident chain? In theory it's a simple, yes. However since I have zero practical experience, I'd like to know what those with experience have to say.
Did you even read past the sentence where they asked for direct or look at the map of where they crashed (which was after they got to ZEDAG)? The problem was not the routing, but that the whole TAA had an MEA above 2,000'.The crew should have been out ahead the airplane and ahead of ATC. They should not have been simply responding to instructions "monkey see monkey do" style. when they asked for direct they should have already known their minimum acceptable altitude and not taken any thing less from ATC.
Do you ever get tired of jumping my bones with snide remarks? The problem was the altitude, Ms. Direct or Bust. The altitude depends on the routing.Did you even read past the sentence where they asked for direct or look at the map of where they crashed (which was after they got to ZEDAG)? The problem was not the routing, but that the whole TAA had an MEA above 2,000'.
I will point it out when you are clearly wrong, and don't understand the TAA concept, in this case.Do you ever get tired of jumping my bones with snide remarks? The problem was the altitude, Ms. Direct or Bust. The altitude depends on the routing.