polaris
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2013
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- 132
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polaris
It's a moonless, clear night in the rural Midwest, and you want to take a night flight to an unfamiliar airport. The runway does not have a precision approach (just a GPS approach over a river and a VOR-A approach), and the runway does not have VASI or PAPI lights. Is there any way to make this safe?
I did some reading and I saw that the black hole only becomes a problem if you decide to shoot a long straight-in approach (more than 2 miles). And that if you do a standard pattern entry and make the appropriate turns, you will be fine. Is this true?
Just a side story, but this situation arose a few weeks ago. I was scared, so I decided to land at another airport with an ILS approach (but no VASI/PAPI). During the final approach on about a 5-mile final, I ignored my HSI on purpose to see how accurately I could fly the approach visually. I thought I was doing a good job, but when I looked down at my HSI about 10 seconds later, it showed that I was way below the glide slope. This was a wake up call for me... the black hole illusion is REAL... even if you are fully aware of the potential for the illusion.
So my question is, is there a way to safely fly into an unfamiliar rural airport with a black hole approach (no precision approach, no VASI/PAPI) on a moonless, clear night?
I did some reading and I saw that the black hole only becomes a problem if you decide to shoot a long straight-in approach (more than 2 miles). And that if you do a standard pattern entry and make the appropriate turns, you will be fine. Is this true?
Just a side story, but this situation arose a few weeks ago. I was scared, so I decided to land at another airport with an ILS approach (but no VASI/PAPI). During the final approach on about a 5-mile final, I ignored my HSI on purpose to see how accurately I could fly the approach visually. I thought I was doing a good job, but when I looked down at my HSI about 10 seconds later, it showed that I was way below the glide slope. This was a wake up call for me... the black hole illusion is REAL... even if you are fully aware of the potential for the illusion.
So my question is, is there a way to safely fly into an unfamiliar rural airport with a black hole approach (no precision approach, no VASI/PAPI) on a moonless, clear night?