kicktireslightfires
Pre-takeoff checklist
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kicktireslightfires
Why is LNAV+V advisory only on the glide slope? What is it using to provide the “advisory” glide slope? GPS?
Because it’s a GPS derived vertical path and doesn’t meet FAA requirements for LNAV/VNAV or LPV. With LNAV+V, you are still shooting the approach to LNAV mins.Why is LNAV+V advisory only on the glide slope? What is it using to provide the “advisory” glide slope? GPS?
But, isn’t a dive and drive which many (perhaps most) suggest, no better and perhaps worse clearance than following the vertical guidance?
Yes, this.I remember reading in one of the flying magazines where they found a couple of LNAV+V approaches that flew you into or very close to hills / trees / other obstructions if you followed the vertical guidance.
There aren't any final segment step-down fixes on that N23 Runway 07 approach. It's the high HAT of the MDA that should be a major clue to the wary.With a +V approach, you have to watch carefully for additional step down fixes on the approach. The +V will provide a smooth continuous glidepath from the FAF to the MDA, but as shown in the picture above, it will fly you into a hill if you don't observe the intermediate step downs.
There aren't any final segment step-down fixes on that N23 Runway 07 approach. It's the high HAT of the MDA that should be a major clue to the wary.
I remember reading in one of the flying magazines where they found a couple of LNAV+V approaches that flew you into or very close to hills / trees / other obstructions if you followed the vertical guidance.
Well if you’re below MDA and can’t see the obstacles there are other more fundamental problems.Down to the MDA, it doesn't particularly matter how you get there from an obstacle clearance standpoint. You are guaranteed obstacle clearance. It's BELOW the MDA where there's a difference. For a vertically-guided procedure, there is some level of obstacle protection below the DA. For a non-vertically guided procedure, there is not necessarily ANY obstacle clearance provided down to the runway. That's like the example @Country Flier mentions. However, with an advisory glidepath, since it looks just like a "real" glidepath on the instruments, you can be deceived into just treating it as such. Most importantly, and dangerously, at night where you can't see those trees or the hillside that you possibly aren't protected from, but you assume you are.
I prefer the dive and drive as well...for the same reasons. I also find it easier, as descending to an altitude only requires the precision of leveling at the altitude, with no real "precision" on the descent (if that makes sense).The Sidney, NY airport was the iconic one. But, to be fair, the approach (or any approach), flown as directed, does not fly into any obstacles. The problem occurs if pilots follow the advisory vertical guidance beyond the MDA. LNAV+V advisory vertical guidance does not imply obstruction clearance below the MDA. The brouhaha got the Sidney approach made N/A at night for a long while.
Personally, I like "dive and drive" for non-precision approaches. It gives me a better chance of breaking out and spotting the airport sooner than a gradual descent. It also assures that you monitor your stepdowns correctly. Dive and drive is not unsafe as long as you properly control your aircraft. For Sidney and all the other Central NY airports nestled in the hills here, the sooner you get to visual conditions, the better the chances of making it in in our perpetually gloom during parts of the year.
It shouldn't be. Those stepdowns before the MDA are specifically there for obstacle clearance.But, isn’t a dive and drive which many (perhaps most) suggest, no better and perhaps worse clearance than following the vertical guidance?
There is no evaluation by the procedure designer of any obstacles along the VDA below the MDA.
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This is an over simplification
Get them from me. Or, make a FOIA and you might get them in 18 months. I have them back to 2007.There's been a lot of discussion in several forums here of how vertical guidance provided by GPS navigators for LNAV+V approaches should not be used below MDA.
So the perhaps obvious question is...why doesn't the GPS navigator limit vertical guidance to MDA? After the advisory GP hits MDA, it could either throw a flag on vertical guidance, or switch to constant altitude guidance at MDA.
Is anyone aware of the thinking/logic behind current behavior by Garmin and othe mfrs?
Bonus Question: I learned that the official analysis of an IAP is legally documented by the FAA in a "letter of transmittal". The FAA website only seems to give access to such letters issued in the last 24 months. Is there a way to access letters older than that?
Bonus Question: I learned that the official analysis of an IAP is legally documented by the FAA in a "letter of transmittal". The FAA website only seems to give access to such letters issued in the last 24 months. Is there a way to access letters older than that?
There's been a lot of discussion in several forums here of how vertical guidance provided by GPS navigators for LNAV+V approaches should not be used below MDA.
So the perhaps obvious question is...why doesn't the GPS navigator limit vertical guidance to MDA? After the advisory GP hits MDA, it could either throw a flag on vertical guidance, or switch to constant altitude guidance at MDA.
Is anyone aware of the thinking/logic behind current behavior by Garmin and othe mfrs?
Bonus Question: I learned that the official analysis of an IAP is legally documented by the FAA in a "letter of transmittal". The FAA website only seems to give access to such letters issued in the last 24 months. Is there a way to access letters older than that?
How would Garmin know the MDA that applies to the approach? The MDA may be affected by category, remote altimeter, NOTAM, circling ... The path is defined from the FAF or step down approach to the TCH. The pilot is required to use their altimeter to determine the MDA or DA, not all installations have that information available and it can't be determined from GPS altitude. It is simple, use the advisory GP down to the MDA and compy with all step down minimums using your altimeter.
Even if the MDA was a value that was entered by the pilot, it is an MSL altitude and not a GPS altitude. So comparing a GPS altitude with a baro altitude is not straight forward as you also need to know the altimeter setting, the pressure altitude with some precision and the temperature. So even if all those items are input to the GPS or more likely a PFD, at best it is a calculated value whose only value would be to suppress the +V below the MDA, when alternatively, the pilot could simply follow the rules and use visual cues below the MDA. Even with an LPV, pilots are required to determine the DA using their altimeter and only continue the approach if the appropriate visual cues are available.