Going south to north along V231 can I use the MOCA or must I cross at 13000 for the MCA? I’m confused at jessy what is the lowest I can go along that airway
At 13,000 ft he will prolly need oxygen. At 11,000 ft not so much. Knowing what altitude to plan for sorta matters. Learning how to read charts is sorta important too. Either reason is good enough to ask.He mentions lost comms because otherwise you’ll be at an assigned altitude. Why are you asking? That might help people answer your question.
nav or com reception problems. Missoula is in a sorta hole with terrain all around so that VOR is gonna have problems. ATC transmitter locations are also problems in the hills. They’ve made improvements over the years but there are still holes in the system.I saw it and was curious as to how they can have a MOCA which gives obstacle clearance that is lower then an MCA it doesn’t make sense to me.
I saw it and was curious as to how they can have a MOCA which gives obstacle clearance that is lower then an MCA it doesn’t make sense to me why would you need to climb higher then a MOCA to clear an obstacle for MCA when the MOCA should give you the clearance ?
The oxygen makes sense, didn’t think of that. But if I couldn’t fly the MEA, I wouldn’t fly it. Counting on only having to fly MOCA altitudes sounds like setting yourself up for trouble.At 13,000 ft he will prolly need oxygen. At 11,000 ft not so much. Knowing what altitude to plan for sorta matters.
Agree that requesting MOCA would prolly get an interesting response from ATC.The oxygen makes sense, didn’t think of that. But if I couldn’t fly the MEA, I wouldn’t fly it. Counting on only having to fly MOCA altitudes sounds like setting yourself up for trouble.
The MCA is part of the MEA thing that guarantees NAVAID reception. The MCA will guarantee you BOTH obstacle clearance and NAVAID reception. You don't need the MCA to clear the rocks in this case where there is both a MOCA and an MEA.I saw it and was curious as to how they can have a MOCA which gives obstacle clearance that is lower then an MCA it doesn’t make sense to me why would you need to climb higher then a MOCA to clear an obstacle for MCA when the MOCA should give you the clearance ?
The MCA is part of the MEA thing that guarantees NAVAID reception. The MCA will guarantee you BOTH obstacle clearance and NAVAID reception. You don't the MCA to clear the rocks.
Yeah. IN THIS CASE being edited into that post. thanksJust to be clear, I would make that "You don't need the MCA to clear the rocks IN THIS CASE." There are many cases where not making the MCA will indeed put you in the rocks.
I saw it and was curious as to how they can have a MOCA which gives obstacle clearance that is lower then an MCA it doesn’t make sense to me why would you need to climb higher then a MOCA to clear an obstacle for MCA when the MOCA should give you the clearance ?
But why can I be lower then 13 going south ? I can’t use the MOCA? I don’t get your answer I’m not asking about lost comms I’m asking for a normal flight what is the lowest altitude I can use why have a MOCA if you must be at the MCA?
Correct!Studying this now, in my mind, to answer this correctly on the test, if you have that flag with the X at a fix, you cross at at least the altitude associated with the flag or you get the answer wrong.
Yes, the X flag mean you must cross at the altitude indicated or higher. No X flag mean you can start your climb when you cross the point, you are not required to be at the new altitude yet.Studying this now, in my mind, to answer this correctly on the test, if you have that flag with the X at a fix, you cross at at least the altitude associated with the flag or you get the answer wrong.
The MEA = Obstruction clearance + NAV Reception while the MOCA is only Obstruction clearance and Reception within 22 NM of the VOR stations defining the airway. You can fly above the MOCA, at appropriate IFR/VFR cruise altitudes all day long with a GPS and never have an issue. However, remember that you can't actually cruise at the MOCA (8700) because of vertical seperation issues. The proper VFR/IFR altitude for direction of travel, which in this case just shy of due South (178-179) you would have to be at least 9000 IFR or 9500 VFR.