Thanks for the replies.
I do have 2 airports nearby that have VOR/LOC/ILS approaches available. A little more background, the VOR is a Narco Nav 12 with GS. The plane also has a mounted Garmin 496 (VFR only) and an STEC 60-2 autopilot.
Thanks for the replies.
I do have 2 airports nearby that have VOR/LOC/ILS approaches available. A little more background, the VOR is a Narco Nav 12 with GS. The plane also has a mounted Garmin 496 (VFR only) and an STEC 60-2 autopilot.
After 10 years with my PPL, I'm finally about to begin IFR training. Would there be any issues taking my instrument checkride in a plane with only a single VOR/GS? No DME. Thanks for any advice!
Can't you fly the ILS/LOC approach as a nonprecision approach for the check ride, just using the S-LOC minimums on the ILS/LOC plate?Two nonprecision approaches using two different nav systems. Unless you've got a non-ILS LOC available, it going to be hard to do.
I don't know. With a modern GPS, we can turn off LPV so we don't get a glidepath. AFAIK, cannot do that with a VOR/LOC indicator. Whether pretending to ignore the needle in front of you is acceptable or not, I don't know. Never had a reason to check.Can't you fly the ILS/LOC approach as a nonprecision approach for the check ride, just using the S-LOC minimums on the ILS/LOC plate?
Only using NDBs.Doesn’t anyone require (non gps) intersection holding anymore??
For what its worth . . .I don't know. With a modern GPS, we can turn off LPV so we don't get a glidepath. AFAIK, cannot do that with a VOR/LOC indicator. Whether pretending to ignore the needle in front of you is acceptable or not, I don't know. Never had a reason to check.
I don't know. With a modern GPS, we can turn off LPV so we don't get a glidepath. AFAIK, cannot do that with a VOR/LOC indicator. Whether pretending to ignore the needle in front of you is acceptable or not, I don't know. Never had a reason to check.
I think that was my question. Do you happen to have a reference that pretending you don't have vertical guidance when you actually do is acceptable?Just ignore the GS and fly the LOC with the step downs.
Splitting hairs here, but localizers are typically owned and maintained by FAA, not the airports.I don’t know where you are, but a lot of airports are not maintaining their LOCs thus you are out of business.
I think that was my question. Do you happen to have a reference that pretending you don't have vertical guidance when you actually do is acceptable?
It doesn’t matter because you’re not using it, you’re using the step downs, it should obvious to the DPE if you’re flying it as a loc or a ils, also nothing says you can’t, thus you can.
Absolutely! But we're not talking about the real world. We're talking about the checkride.There are real world reasons to want to fly the localizer only instead of the whole ILS. Nothing wrong with ignoring the glide-slope in favor of localizer only minima
Why not just tape over the ILS part? Piece of masking tape (horizontal strip) should do it. I've got an SL30 with a CDI, so for the non-precision, I just cover the CDI since the SL30 has the LOC.I don't know. With a modern GPS, we can turn off LPV so we don't get a glidepath. AFAIK, cannot do that with a VOR/LOC indicator. Whether pretending to ignore the needle in front of you is acceptable or not, I don't know. Never had a reason to check.
I can’t find anything specific other than what is in the PTS under the changes for the airplane requirements.I think that was my question. Do you happen to have a reference that pretending you don't have vertical guidance when you actually do is acceptable?
I can’t find anything specific other than what is in the PTS under the changes for the airplane requirements.
FAA-S-8081-4E PTS Instrument
https://www.faa.gov/training_testing/testing/test_standards/media/instrument_rating_pts_change5.pdf
• Area of Operation VI: Instrument Approach Procedures, Task A: Nonprecision Approach (NPA)
o NOTE: added sentence that NPA will have no vertical guidance
o Modified Objective 11 to emphasize stabilized approach profile
There are real world reasons to want to fly the localizer only instead of the whole ILS. Nothing wrong with ignoring the glide-slope in favor of localizer only minima
Minus the GS being out or another hardware issue, I can’t think of any good reason to go step downs when you have a good ILS/LPV, just fly into the glide slope and follow it to mins
You can’t think of any scenario where you would rather get below the clouds faster/further out, than ride the glide slope? Most approaches aren’t flown to minima, they end before that
Step downs are much more prone to errors and higher work load plus other issues, even if it’s night VMC following the GS down is a good call, when I take the visual I still back it up with a loaded and activated approach, ideally one with a GS.
When I’m on an approach going the opposite direction of local vfr traffic, I prefer to be out of the clouds, able to see and be seen, as far away from the airport as possible. When I’m opting to do a step down over a gs it’s usually mvfr at the airport, I just need to get under the layer.
So you’d prefer to edit a cloud into busy VFR traffic at a higher speed and decent rate? Vs exiting into VMC at a stable decent and at a normal approach speed?
I’d rather exit the cloud before I get to the busy vfr traffic. Half moon bay is one airport where I have approached from the north there on the gps approach and have exited the clouds through 1000 feet looking straight at a plane on upwind. I kid you not, the person actually told me that straight Ins are illegal. In a perfect world it makes sense to follow a glide slope, and in theory, it doesn’t make sense to do a step down. But it’s not a perfect world and we aren’t living in theory and the guy doing laps in the pattern doesn’t have any clue where you are going to pop out of those clouds and I don’t know where he is until I do.
This is sort of like the “special vfr isn’t needed anymore” conversation. Those who use it, do so because they find a benefit. Those who don’t, think it’s stupid and just a relict of the past.
If you are gaining speed on a step down approach, you are doing it wrong
I don't recall that language in the defunct PTS, but that's just me - no need to look at the question before. But I don't see it in the current ACS testing standards.But it also says "If the equipment allows, at least one nonprecision approach shall be conducted without vertical guidance."
He then has two excuses allowing him to do an ILS as LOC-only: one, his equipment doesn't allow it; and two, he only needs to do one of the two NPAs without vertical guidance anyway. He can do one NPA without vertical guidance in the form of a VOR approach.