azpilot
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2015
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azpilot
-- Note - I am going to talk to my CFII about this, but I'm curious what everyone here has to say as well --
I'm chugging along through my instrument training. I'm up to about 30 hours of simulated instrument time. Hoping to wrap up the checkride by the end of October. One of the things my instructor and I have noted is that there is about a 4 degree offset between the VOR nav radio 1 and the GPS signal. The two VOR radios are sufficiently accurate to pass an airborne VOR check, which meets the requirements to use them for IFR flight.
However, based on the approaches we have flown, it's pretty obvious that the VOR#1 is 4 degrees off. One of the regular VOR approaches we do for practice out here is the VOR runway 5 into KCGZ. The IAF is the TFD VOR. After you cross the IAF, you fly the 048 radial to runway 5 at KCGZ. It is 7.8 NM from TFD to the missed approach point.
If I did my math right, a 4 degree error results in a lateral deviation of ~3300 feet. At the visual descent point, 6.4 NM from the VOR, the lateral error would be ~2700 feet. That's pretty far off.
So what do I do on a checkride??? There is a really good chance this will be the VOR approach we fly for my checkride. The VOR technically meets the requirements for use in an IFR environment. But if I'm doing the most common VOR approach out here in our practice area, and I have all the instruments lined up, I'm not going to be anywhere near the runway.
Like I said, I'm going to talk to my CFII about it, and I will approach this situation based on the feedback I get from him. But I know how much us pilots love to split hairs and talk through stuff like this, so I figured I'd ask what you all think.
Question:
How hard is it to 'adjust' the nav 1 vor and fix it to get rid of the 4 degree offset???
I'm chugging along through my instrument training. I'm up to about 30 hours of simulated instrument time. Hoping to wrap up the checkride by the end of October. One of the things my instructor and I have noted is that there is about a 4 degree offset between the VOR nav radio 1 and the GPS signal. The two VOR radios are sufficiently accurate to pass an airborne VOR check, which meets the requirements to use them for IFR flight.
However, based on the approaches we have flown, it's pretty obvious that the VOR#1 is 4 degrees off. One of the regular VOR approaches we do for practice out here is the VOR runway 5 into KCGZ. The IAF is the TFD VOR. After you cross the IAF, you fly the 048 radial to runway 5 at KCGZ. It is 7.8 NM from TFD to the missed approach point.
If I did my math right, a 4 degree error results in a lateral deviation of ~3300 feet. At the visual descent point, 6.4 NM from the VOR, the lateral error would be ~2700 feet. That's pretty far off.
So what do I do on a checkride??? There is a really good chance this will be the VOR approach we fly for my checkride. The VOR technically meets the requirements for use in an IFR environment. But if I'm doing the most common VOR approach out here in our practice area, and I have all the instruments lined up, I'm not going to be anywhere near the runway.
Like I said, I'm going to talk to my CFII about it, and I will approach this situation based on the feedback I get from him. But I know how much us pilots love to split hairs and talk through stuff like this, so I figured I'd ask what you all think.
Question:
How hard is it to 'adjust' the nav 1 vor and fix it to get rid of the 4 degree offset???