There are getting more common. There are several ILS approaches with TAAs and I expect there to be more. In most cases there are two versions, a Z and a Y with one of them being GPS enhanced; the other solely ground-based. In my immediate area, there are three of those, including my home base. Compare the TTA ILS 3 Z with the ILS 3 Y. This one is a little unusual since it's a combo, but it was not the existence of a TAA I was thinking of when I posted.This is the first ILS TAA I think I've seen. They may be more common nowadays than I'm thinking as I mostly fly into airports with only RNAV IAPs so don't see many ILS's outside of the sim.
The hold based on either time or distance?but it was not the existence of a TAA I was thinking of when I posted.
Yep. Interesting, eh?The hold based on either time or distance?
It’s a double non-standard. I’m also interested in the correct way to begin the approach if GPS is not available and you’re not getting vectors. The plate doesn’t require radar, GPS, or other RNAV to fly the approach, only GPS to use the TAA. Fly an airway to MEM or HLI, then the designated radial from there to EFPUB, and then the HILPT?Yep. Interesting, eh?
It’s a double non-standard. I’m also interested in the correct way to begin the approach if GPS is not available and you’re not getting vectors. The plate doesn’t require radar, GPS, or other RNAV to fly the approach, only GPS to use the TAA. Fly an airway to MEM or HLI, then the designated radial from there to EFPUB, and then the HILPT?
Good observation. There were probably more at one time but the plate indicates the only published non-RNAV non-radar access is via the HLI transition.I’m also interested in the correct way to begin the approach if GPS is not available and you’re not getting vectors. The plate doesn’t require radar, GPS, or other RNAV to fly the approach, only GPS to use the TAA. Fly an airway to MEM or HLI, then the designated radial from there to EFPUB, and then the HILPT?
You could intercept the localizer pretty much anywhere within its service volume and proceed to the HILPT from there.It’s a double non-standard. I’m also interested in the correct way to begin the approach if GPS is not available and you’re not getting vectors. The plate doesn’t require radar, GPS, or other RNAV to fly the approach, only GPS to use the TAA. Fly an airway to MEM or HLI, then the designated radial from there to EFPUB, and then the HILPT?
That's probably the age of the plate and that 3A is a minor amendment. 3A is 2017; 3 was 2013.But yeah, I’d expect GPS required for TAA to he in the notes box as well.
I had to view it on a computer rather than my phone to notice the additional information at HLI for that transition. It doesn't hold any records for busiest plate in the book, but it is certainly above average.Good observation. There were probably more at one time but the plate indicates the only published non-RNAV non-radar access is via the HLI transition.
If you can navigate yourself into the localizer service volume, that would work. But without RNAV or vectors I think the only way to accomplish that would be to fly a known radial outbound from one of the charted VORs. Per @midlifeflyer's post #9, the charted transition from HLI is probably the single correct answer.You could intercept the localizer pretty much anywhere within its service volume and proceed to the HILPT from there.
What strikes me is the decision to do it all on one plate instead of dividing into Z and Y variants; one with a TAA and one without. That's a good @RussR question. Maybe timing.I had to view it on a computer rather than my phone to notice the additional information at HLI for that transition. It doesn't hold any records for busiest plate in the book, but it is certainly above average.
Direct MEM, direct EFPUB, then the holding entry for the course reversal, or the feeder off HLI to EFPUB.I’m also interested in the correct way to begin the approach if GPS is not available and you’re not getting vectors. The plate doesn’t require radar, GPS, or other RNAV to fly the approach, only GPS to use the TAA. Fly an airway to MEM or HLI, then the designated radial from there to EFPUB, and then the HILPT?
There is no published route from MEM to EFPUB.Direct MEM, direct EFPUB, then the holding entry for the course reversal, or the feeder off HLI to EFPUB.
Me too since, after all, if you are loading it from the database, you have GPS. But it's probably a no harm, no foul.Jepp charting only the distance seems incorrect to me.
What's the altitude for that leg? (That's your hint it's not a published route.)Direct MEM, direct EFPUB,
There's no published route from the departure airport to the MEM VOR, either. That's what Direct is used for. EFPUB is an IAF. You need clearance to EFPUB, that you have the ability to navigate, and a clearance for the approach starting at EFPUB.There is no published route from MEM to EFPUB.
The altitude assigned by ATC which is at, or above, the minimum IFR altitude as defined by 14 CFR 91.177.What's the altitude for that leg? (That's your hint it's not a published route.)