Wow, quite the replies. As the Original Poster, I'm sorry I was away the last 3 days, and am only now able to sift through this great topic - great because of the replies from you all!!
I might point out the following;
1. I was asking whether the ils GS would ALWAYS keep you ABOVE the charted altituded, not whether flying the GS may make you bust a mandatory altitude which may be below it. Hence the ILS 06 TEB with Dandy mandatory altitude below the GS altitude was not what I was wondering about. I am aware they exist in places.
2. Chucky, if max 500 feet per nm for the intial and intermediate segment is correct, then it seems possible that an ils meeting this criteria is possible. I thought 300 feet to be the maximum, but I bow to your greater knowledge
3. Scott, very interesting email. It says though"failure to meet altitude requirements", perhaps as per TEB ils 06 above. Not necessarily that flying the GS will take you BELOW charted altitudes.
4. Those who sent a link to the red board, thanks, but I'm not a member and couldn't access
And the prize goes to...John Collins (no surprise there I guess)
You sealed it buddy!! That link to the charting forum, Intermediate Fix Altitudes and ILS GS at
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/...009-01-283.pdf
explains it all. I even did the math, using 318 feet per nm for a 3 deg GS, assumed a TCH of 50 feet, and used both the dme difference and the distances posted at the bottom of the profile view. The numbers I got while not exactly the FAA numbers in red on the link, were clearly BELOW the charted altitudes.
If anyone hasn't read the link, I'd recommend they do so...shows indeed that an ils GS can be below charted altitudes.
So I'm thinking my question has been answered, but hope the link can continue if those with further inquires so desire.
Thanks to all!! Stan