Tantalum
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2017
- Messages
- 9,250
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San_Diego_Pilot
Pretty straightforward question.. this was the one areas of my IR checkride that the DPE wasn't thrilled about.. he still passed me but it made for an interesting discussion:
Q: You get in your plane, the GTN650 is powering up, and you notice the database has expired, in his example it expired some point last month. So not super old, but definitely not current. It's IMC.. do you still go flying? And if yes, what are you filing as.. Slant Golf?
I've since posed this question in person a few times and each time got different answers
My response was yes, the FAR AIM allows for this so long as you've verified that the location of the waypoints, etc., that you plan to use are still, in fact, accurate. The DPE wasn't thrilled with this, his response was that if you get a reroute on your flight, how are you in the air going to go and validate and verify the waypoints..? he also asked that I demonstrate how to actually validate the accuracy of the waypoints one against the other and I wasn't really able to show that either. "Zoom out on the GPS and compare the intersection location against what the current paper chart shows" doesn't actually give you lat / long and prove that a waypoint hasn't moved, etc.
So what say you guys? In reality, in practice.. would you not fly that day?
For the sake of simplicity, assume your approaches are ILS and the plates on your Foreflight are fully up to date.. I'm just talking strictly about filing and navigating in the air
Q: You get in your plane, the GTN650 is powering up, and you notice the database has expired, in his example it expired some point last month. So not super old, but definitely not current. It's IMC.. do you still go flying? And if yes, what are you filing as.. Slant Golf?
I've since posed this question in person a few times and each time got different answers
My response was yes, the FAR AIM allows for this so long as you've verified that the location of the waypoints, etc., that you plan to use are still, in fact, accurate. The DPE wasn't thrilled with this, his response was that if you get a reroute on your flight, how are you in the air going to go and validate and verify the waypoints..? he also asked that I demonstrate how to actually validate the accuracy of the waypoints one against the other and I wasn't really able to show that either. "Zoom out on the GPS and compare the intersection location against what the current paper chart shows" doesn't actually give you lat / long and prove that a waypoint hasn't moved, etc.
So what say you guys? In reality, in practice.. would you not fly that day?
For the sake of simplicity, assume your approaches are ILS and the plates on your Foreflight are fully up to date.. I'm just talking strictly about filing and navigating in the air