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- Apr 23, 2013
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3G
I was listening to @write-stuff’s latest IFR mock oral and one of the debrief comments caused me pause. The DPE hit the hammer on lost comms procedures and it made me think about the failure.
Let’s assume you have a Comm/Nav 1 and Comm/Nav 2 and you’ve been cleared to the final destination which has (and advertised) ILS XX as the approach in IMC.
For some reason, C/N1 and C/N2 become INOP five miles from the IAF, you have been cleared for the fix. What do you do?
Same scenario; let’s say complete electrical failure and you’re EFB packed it in early. What do you do?
Point to ponder : do we assume a loss of comms does not equate to a loss of navaids.
PTP2: If you’re late to the clearance limit, do you expect the failure is yours or the FAAs and what warm fuzzy reassures you it’s safe and deconflicted to proceed?
Let’s assume you have a Comm/Nav 1 and Comm/Nav 2 and you’ve been cleared to the final destination which has (and advertised) ILS XX as the approach in IMC.
For some reason, C/N1 and C/N2 become INOP five miles from the IAF, you have been cleared for the fix. What do you do?
Same scenario; let’s say complete electrical failure and you’re EFB packed it in early. What do you do?
Point to ponder : do we assume a loss of comms does not equate to a loss of navaids.
PTP2: If you’re late to the clearance limit, do you expect the failure is yours or the FAAs and what warm fuzzy reassures you it’s safe and deconflicted to proceed?