MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
I've had friends who have flown that DME arc approach in actual, to mins, because that was their only option due to the ILS being out at MTN.
I wouldn't hesitate to fly it, but I'm kinda weird.
I've had friends who have flown that DME arc approach in actual, to mins, because that was their only option due to the ILS being out at MTN.
I wouldn't hesitate to fly it, but I'm kinda weird.
All it's gotta do is get me below the clouds to spot the airport in time to land.
A descent to MEA can often do that, which is about all one of these useless arc IAPs is.
So where at Martin State is the MEA anywhere near 900 feet?
I see 1,800. But, that wasn't my point in any case.
It is basically a VFR approach. It "works at this location because it is very flat around there.
There is no point to it. If there was they would be all over the country.
And the DME arc approach is hardly the only type that's a no point approach. SDF approaches have no point today either, yet they still are out there.
Flew this one in a KC-135 last September. Of all the times I've landed at Honolulu/Hickam, it was the first time landing to the west. It was eye opening.
http://155.178.201.160/d-tpp/1411/00754LDAD26L.PDF
Note that it is a 45 degree offset. The maximum permitted by criteria is 30 degrees. But, the feds being the "inventive" folks they are write up a waiver with tortured logic that permits the 45 degree offset. More than one air carrier crew has been bitten by that approach, especially during a howling "Kona" storm with low ceilings, driving rain, and strong winds out of the southwest.
But, for those with the high tech equipment and the training have, instead, this option:
http://aeronav.faa.gov/d-tpp/1411/00754rr26l.pdf
I spoke with a Hawaiian Airlines a 330 crew about one year ago. That airplane could easily do this approach but their company doesn't spend the money to train and qualify for it. Go figure.
It's been simplified since then, but in the old days (1970-72 was when I flew it frequently) the Santa Barbara LOC/ILS 7 was a lot of fun. From Fillmore VORTAC you went in a westerly direction 30-some nm to CHANNEL, then a ~45° left turn to GOLETA, then a ~45° right turn to LOBSTER, ~90° right turn to HALIBUT, where you made a ~90° turn onto the localizer. (This was in the days before intersections were limited to five-letter names.) Try it with a single VOR, no DME, no transponder, and of course no LORAN or GPS.
I've never flown it, of course, but the "Checkerboard" Runway 13 visual step-down approach to the old Kai Tak Airport in Hong Kong had to have been a challenge, especially in large airplanes at high approach speeds.
[EDIT: Sorry, didn't catch the 'USA only' in the OP]
Note that it is a 45 degree offset. The maximum permitted by criteria is 30 degrees. But, the feds being the "inventive" folks they are write up a waiver with tortured logic that permits the 45 degree offset. More than one air carrier crew has been bitten by that approach, especially during a howling "Kona" storm with low ceilings, driving rain, and strong winds out of the southwest.
But, for those with the high tech equipment and the training have, instead, this option:
http://aeronav.faa.gov/d-tpp/1411/00754rr26l.pdf
I spoke with a Hawaiian Airlines a 330 crew about one year ago. That airplane could easily do this approach but their company doesn't spend the money to train and qualify for it. Go figure.
No.As a matter of curiosity, does anyone know why HNL doesn't have a single LPV approach, despite having three ILS approaches?
As a matter of curiosity, does anyone know why HNL doesn't have a single LPV approach, despite having three ILS approaches?
No airport in Hawaii has a WAAS approach. The WAAS coverage is insufficient. It is robust in Alaska but not Hawaii.
The interesting thing about KASE is what you do if you break out at minimums or if you need to go around after committing to descent from the MDA.I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the ASE LOC/DME-E approach. 5 different nav frequencies, a really short leg off the IAF, several stepdowns, missed approach going onto the backcourse of a second localizer (which isn't reverse sensing because you're flying outbound - Think about that one for a minute)... That's one hairy approach.
http://flightaware.com/resources/airport/KASE/IAP/all/pdf
The interesting thing about KASE is what you do if you break out at minimums or if you need to go around after committing to descent from the MDA.
Actually because of the configuration of the terrain, once you are passed the missed approach point it's better to circle to the left (meaning northeast).Do tell - I've only flown *over* Aspen, not *into* Aspen!
From the plate, it looks like you have to drop a lot of altitude in a hurry, which is why it's a circling-only approach - I suppose you either make a 360 to the right to land straight in, or circle right to make a left-hand pattern for the opposite end?
Go-around, it looks like you'd need to circle to the right as well. Or maybe a half cuban.
I flew up the Crystal River, around the end of the ridge northwest of Capitol Peak, then over ASE from the same direction as the approach and continued down the Roaring Fork River before landing at Leadville. But that's definitely NOT something you can do while IFR/IMC!
Nope.Actually because of the configuration of the terrain, once you are passed the missed approach point it's better to circle to the left (meaning northeast).
Yup. I've done it. A number of times.Nope.
dtuuri
RWY 15–33: H8006X100 (ASPH–GRVD) S–75, D–100, 2D–160
MIRL
RWY 15: MALSF. PAPI(P4L)—GA 3.5o TCH 56 ́. 1.9% up.
RWY 33: REIL. Thld dsplcd 1000 ́. Road. Rgt tfc. 2.0% down.
So you circle to the northeast, just as I stated in my previous post.
I can only go by the advice I paid for after the first time I landed there. I thought it would be a good investment to hire a C-182 and a local CFI to familiarize me and my copilot with local techniques. I was interested in the best way to circle and what to do if the tower clears an airplane for takeoff while coming in the opposite way on final. My review of the charts led me to think as you, but he said the same thing to me I said to you, "Nope."
So, off we went and did a few of the approaches. Then on our last landing, damned if the very thing I was concerned about didn't happen--tower cleared a jet for departure and told us to go around. At this point we were well below circling minimums, so he explained how you want to climb to the right of the runway and "bite off" as much extra turning radius as you can by sliding up Buttermilk as you gain altitude. Buttermilk rises from the airport and the more room you can give yourself by climbing and widening out farther as you're able, the more turning radius you have to reverse course. Going the other way, he contended, can leave you running out of room after you've committed yourself.
But I haven't been there often enough to say there isn't another way, only that the logic made sense and I saw it done with my own two eyes. If I had to do it tomorrow, that's how I'd do it.
dtuuri
I can only go by the advice I paid for after the first time I landed there. I thought it would be a good investment to hire a C-182 and a local CFI to familiarize me and my copilot with local techniques. I was interested in the best way to circle and what to do if the tower clears an airplane for takeoff while coming in the opposite way on final. My review of the charts led me to think as you, but he said the same thing to me I said to you, "Nope."
So, off we went and did a few of the approaches. Then on our last landing, damned if the very thing I was concerned about didn't happen--tower cleared a jet for departure and told us to go around. At this point we were well below circling minimums, so he explained how you want to climb to the right of the runway and "bite off" as much extra turning radius as you can by sliding up Buttermilk as you gain altitude. Buttermilk rises from the airport and the more room you can give yourself by climbing and widening out farther as you're able, the more turning radius you have to reverse course. Going the other way, he contended, can leave you running out of room after you've committed yourself.
But I haven't been there often enough to say there isn't another way, only that the logic made sense and I saw it done with my own two eyes. If I had to do it tomorrow, that's how I'd do it.
dtuuri
I prefer to think of it as "...and now, the rest of the story."I knew you wouldn't let it go without a rebuttal.
Are you implying the mountains have moved?I've also been to Aspen as recently as a month ago, not sometime in the distant past.
Are you talking about landing on 33 or executing a go-around?
Then you agree it's left traffic for 15, reversing you position from earlier in the thread?I prefer to think of it as "...and now, the rest of the story."
I didn't have that position. See my comment above about ambiguous terminology. I commented based on your "meaning northeast" description of the maneuver. Initiating a circle to land maneuver from that quadrant was against the advice I got, so I passed it on for consideration. I did not understand you to be discussing left-hand vs. right-hand directions of VFR traffic patterns.Then you agree it's left traffic for 15, reversing you position from earlier in the thread?
Reread your post #62 and your blanket "nope" quoting my post about circling left. When you circle to land you are using a VFR traffic pattern so you basically stay in the northeast quadrant which is left traffic for 15 and right traffic for 33.I didn't have that position. See my comment above about ambiguous terminology. I commented based on your "meaning northeast" description of the maneuver. Initiating a circle to land maneuver from that quadrant was against the advice I got, so I passed it on for consideration. I did not understand you to be discussing left-hand vs. right-hand directions of VFR traffic patterns.
dtuuri
Nope.
dtuuri
Here it is again w/my emphasis:Reread your post #62 and your blanket "nope" quoting my post about circling left. When you circle to land you are using a VFR traffic pattern so you basically stay in the northeast quadrant which is left traffic for 15 and right traffic for 33.
Actually because of the configuration of the terrain, once you are passed the missed approach point it's better to circle to the left (meaning northeast).
Nope.
dtuuri
Turning left is circling northeast to make left traffic even if you slide a little bit to the right at first to make more room for your turn. I definitely wouldn't call that "circling southwest". But you do it however you want. I was answering Kent's question as to how I do it.If you go around, say on short final for 15, the advice I'm passing along was to circle southwest up the Buttermilk slope staying as close as possible to the terrain, so you have more maneuvering room to turn left. If that's what you mean by "northeast", I missed it.
Actually because of the configuration of the terrain, once you are passed the missed approach point it's better to circle to the left (meaning northeast).
Once you are past the MAP you are using your eyes rather than any approach criteria so you would need to make the judgement for yourself when left is better than right. I agree that just past the MAP right might be better. When you are close to landing there is a pretty substantial ridge on the right, though. When you are past the threshold or if you are circling to land, left is definitely better than right, although you can slide a bit to the right to give you more room for the circle to the left.Whoa... What? So you turn toward the *closer* terrain?
I just used ForeFlight to do a semi-transparent overlay of the plate on top of a VFR chart to help understand this... It looks like even past CEYAG (MAP) that you have more room on the right than on the left, though when very close to the airport it kind of evens out and if you fly the runway centerline past the airport, there is more room on the left.
It looks like the radius of the turn to the missed approach procedures is about 1.75nm, which would be standard rate at 330 knots... So it seems like it could be done a bit past the MAP! But at what point is left better than right?
Mari, you've made this approach even MORE interesting... Thanks!
If you only slide a little bit southwest... you're "semi-circling".Turning left is circling northeast to make left traffic even if you slide a little bit to the right at first to make more room for your turn. I definitely wouldn't call that "circling southwest". But you do it however you want. I was answering Kent's question as to how I do it.