Hello!
This thread was inspired by DenverPilot's "And away goes VOR/DME RNAV...." thread.
Why so many?
I'm going to be new student pilot soon. I'll be purchasing my training aircraft (in case you have not seen my first thread, check it out and offer your thoughts on my question) and my time building aircraft, a twin turboprop. One the things that began concerning me as I started my study into buying an aircraft had to do with how the aircraft is equipped with avionics. The type and kind of avionics seems to determine a lot about what kind of IFR flying you can and cannot do - particularly with respect to Navigation and Approaches.
After reading DenverPilot's OP title, it struck me as odd that there are so many different Navaid Types. It then dawned on my that such an array of Navaid Types are probably what also leads to instrument panel clutter. I'm still fairly green, so that last statement might not be true - but that's why I'm asking the question, to find out.
VOR, DME, RNAV - heck I thought RNAV was fairly new! I've heard of LPV, GPS, Localizer, etc., etc., and I've always wondered, why so many? What's the point? I then had the thought that an airspace system that had no back-up was not very safe, so I blamed it on the need for back-up Navaids. But, then I thought, why not just have one type of Navaid and then fill the airspace system with back-ups that support that kind of Navaid. Its just confusing right now for me, personally. I'm sure it will all sink in at some point.
Is this a regional issue. Are there only certain types of Navaids located in certain parts of the country that caused the initial proliferation of so many different Navaid Types in the CONUS? Or, was this a technology issue. Did the world of aviation spin-off multiple types of Navaids as a direct result of competing technologies, or the innovative spirit of engineers, or by way of regulatory requirements?
I have so many questions about Navaids that its not even funny. Or, maybe it is funny, but I should not be laughing because I've got to figure this stuff out sufficient to pass my first DPE check-ride!
Again, what's the point. Doesn't GPS effectively obsolete just about everything else, or am I way oversimplifying the matter entirely? Seriously, how much of this glut of Navaid Types will we be flying, say 20 years from now?
Thanks!
This thread was inspired by DenverPilot's "And away goes VOR/DME RNAV...." thread.
Why so many?
I'm going to be new student pilot soon. I'll be purchasing my training aircraft (in case you have not seen my first thread, check it out and offer your thoughts on my question) and my time building aircraft, a twin turboprop. One the things that began concerning me as I started my study into buying an aircraft had to do with how the aircraft is equipped with avionics. The type and kind of avionics seems to determine a lot about what kind of IFR flying you can and cannot do - particularly with respect to Navigation and Approaches.
After reading DenverPilot's OP title, it struck me as odd that there are so many different Navaid Types. It then dawned on my that such an array of Navaid Types are probably what also leads to instrument panel clutter. I'm still fairly green, so that last statement might not be true - but that's why I'm asking the question, to find out.
VOR, DME, RNAV - heck I thought RNAV was fairly new! I've heard of LPV, GPS, Localizer, etc., etc., and I've always wondered, why so many? What's the point? I then had the thought that an airspace system that had no back-up was not very safe, so I blamed it on the need for back-up Navaids. But, then I thought, why not just have one type of Navaid and then fill the airspace system with back-ups that support that kind of Navaid. Its just confusing right now for me, personally. I'm sure it will all sink in at some point.
Is this a regional issue. Are there only certain types of Navaids located in certain parts of the country that caused the initial proliferation of so many different Navaid Types in the CONUS? Or, was this a technology issue. Did the world of aviation spin-off multiple types of Navaids as a direct result of competing technologies, or the innovative spirit of engineers, or by way of regulatory requirements?
I have so many questions about Navaids that its not even funny. Or, maybe it is funny, but I should not be laughing because I've got to figure this stuff out sufficient to pass my first DPE check-ride!
Again, what's the point. Doesn't GPS effectively obsolete just about everything else, or am I way oversimplifying the matter entirely? Seriously, how much of this glut of Navaid Types will we be flying, say 20 years from now?
Thanks!