Steve Knoblock
Filing Flight Plan
Looking to get an idea of what folks have experienced during IFR practical check rides to meet the approach requirements in the ACS.
Specifically, for a C-172 with dual G5 installation, the round dial airspeed indicator, altimeter, VVI, and turn coordinator are required for the certified configuration.
The ACS says on page A16, "One is expected to be flown with reference to backup or partial panel instrumentation or navigation display, depending on the aircraft’s instrument avionics configuration, representing the failure mode(s) most realistic for the equipment used."
In the old days, this was required because the most realistic failure was the vacuum pump, so you lost your ADI and DG. Made sense to use the turn coordinator with your pitot static stuff to get down.
But in the TAA world, a loss of both G-5's is not "realistic". Loss of electical power could be, but that won't kill the G-5 with it's backup battery (but it will kill the turn coordinator after the battery dies)
So how have the DPE's been enforcing the partial panel requirement? Switching to single G5 ops? or covering both G-5s and making the applicant go to needle/ball/airspeed?
Curious minds want to know what the rest of the world is experiencing............
Specifically, for a C-172 with dual G5 installation, the round dial airspeed indicator, altimeter, VVI, and turn coordinator are required for the certified configuration.
The ACS says on page A16, "One is expected to be flown with reference to backup or partial panel instrumentation or navigation display, depending on the aircraft’s instrument avionics configuration, representing the failure mode(s) most realistic for the equipment used."
In the old days, this was required because the most realistic failure was the vacuum pump, so you lost your ADI and DG. Made sense to use the turn coordinator with your pitot static stuff to get down.
But in the TAA world, a loss of both G-5's is not "realistic". Loss of electical power could be, but that won't kill the G-5 with it's backup battery (but it will kill the turn coordinator after the battery dies)
So how have the DPE's been enforcing the partial panel requirement? Switching to single G5 ops? or covering both G-5s and making the applicant go to needle/ball/airspeed?
Curious minds want to know what the rest of the world is experiencing............