Let's say I want to go from KABC to KXYZ direct (off-airway), and I'm trying to figure out the minimum IFR altitude.
91.177 says the minimum IFR en-route would be
(i) In the case of operations over an area designated as a mountainous area in part 95 of this chapter, an altitude of 2,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown; or
(ii) In any other case, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown.
One could fly above the OROCA, but that's not necessarily the lowest altitude if you don't pass within 4NM of the highest obstacle in the rectangle.
One could pull out paper sectionals, draw an 8nm wide path, and manually search for obstacles along that entire route, but that's rather tedious.
Is there an easier way? Any online tools that can help with this?
I know that several flight planners will show a terrain profile, but I'm not sure exactly what the cross-section represents (does it show whats directly under the path? the highest within 1nm of the path? highest within 4nm?). Are the obstacles included?
91.177 says the minimum IFR en-route would be
(i) In the case of operations over an area designated as a mountainous area in part 95 of this chapter, an altitude of 2,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown; or
(ii) In any other case, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown.
One could fly above the OROCA, but that's not necessarily the lowest altitude if you don't pass within 4NM of the highest obstacle in the rectangle.
One could pull out paper sectionals, draw an 8nm wide path, and manually search for obstacles along that entire route, but that's rather tedious.
Is there an easier way? Any online tools that can help with this?
I know that several flight planners will show a terrain profile, but I'm not sure exactly what the cross-section represents (does it show whats directly under the path? the highest within 1nm of the path? highest within 4nm?). Are the obstacles included?