For technical reasons. Curious, does it operationally make a difference to you?one would think with WAAS accuracy, it IS precision and there are no false GS. still its not considered precision .... why is that?
For technical reasons. Curious, does it operationally make a difference to you?
How much would you like to learn about horizontal and vertical alert limits (HALs and VALs)?It doesn’t , I am just curious of those technical reasons
How much would you like to learn about horizontal and vertical alert limits (HALs and VALs)?
Depends on the POI and the training program.It matters in Part 135 training and certification....the LPV doesn't count for a precision approach, which seems to make no sense.
It matters in Part 135 training and certification. If you are not near an ILS, you have to travel for training and checkrides as the LPV doesn't count for a precision approach, which seems to make no sense.
Keep in mind that under 135, the training program determines what you can and can’t do...the ACS is just the standard for the maneuver.Instrument Rating ACS clearly allows LPV to sub for the precision approach if the DA is below 300'...
For technical reasons. Curious, does it operationally make a difference to you?
True, but not because it is or is not considered precision.It does when determining your alternate
Depends what you mean by "technical."It doesn’t , I am just curious of those technical reasons
Brad, that seems to assume the AFMS limitation is a manufacturer decision independent of the rules and guidance. I'm curious. Any support for that?True, but not because it is or is not considered precision.
You are required to use non-precision minimums when planning an alternate because it is assumed that you are using the alternate without WAAS integrity, thus falling back to LNAV. See AC 90-107. The limitation is based on the technical standards order, and the legal prohibition on using LPV as a planned alternate is in your Flight Manual Supplement. The Garmin 530W flight manual supplement says the following: "It is not acceptable to flight plan a required alternate airport based on RNAV(GPS) LP/LPV or LNAV/VNAV approach minimums. The required alternate airport must be flight planned using an LNAV approach minimums or available ground-based approach aid."
If you read the definition of a precision approach versus non-precision approach in 14 CFR 1.1, a precision approach simply requires an electronic glide slope. If it weren't for the flight manual supplement limitation, you could use precision minimums for alternate planning. Conversely, even if ICAO considered APV to be a precision approach, it wouldn't change the flight manual supplement limitation.
Brad, that seems to assume the AFMS limitation is a manufacturer decision independent of the rules and guidance. I'm curious. Any support for that?
My assumption is the opposite; the AFMS limitation is because of the current guidance. For an example, there's the prohibition on using GPS as primary on a VOR or NDB approach. As soon as the FAA limitation went away, the FMS limitation was edited, with, AFAIK, the only change in the hardware, software or firmware being the removal of the warning.
Depends on the POI and the training program.
Most of the 135 training programs I deal with mirror the ACS with regard to allowing LPV to be considered a “precision approach” for training and checking purposes...we don’t have to do two ILSs, we can do one ILS and one LPV.No, not really! The FSIMS, etc, make it pretty clear that any training program and ops specs are going to differentiate between precision and non-precision approaches. As the ILS is the only precision approach by definition, to include precision approaches in the ops specs, it has to be in the training program and the training program is going to require demonstration of the ability to fly the precision approach on a regular basis. Thus if you are an operator in a remote location that does not regularly go to an airport with an ILS, the training costs to add precision approaches to the ops specs can be prohibited. I ran into that in SE Alaska.
Most of the 135 training programs I deal with mirror the ACS with regard to allowing LPV to be considered a “precision approach” for training and checking purposes...we don’t have to do two ILSs, we can do one ILS and one LPV.
you are correct that if you’re authorized an approach type, it has to be demonstrated, but it has nothing to do with whether or not LPVs are precision approaches.
In our Training Manual, GPS w/Vertical Guidance is listed under Precision Approaches
even +V ?In our Training Manual, GPS w/Vertical Guidance is listed under Precision Approaches
+V isn’t considered an approach with vertical guidance.even +V ?
+V is advisory vertical guidance--a feature from your avionics, not a type of approach. It is an LNAV procedure with your box giving you a vertical path to the visual descent point (VDP).even +V ?
FAA dropped the term LAAS about a decade ago, and went with the ICAO term GBAS. There are some GLS approaches at Newark and Houston, probably a bunch in Europe too.I though that the ground-based systems (LAAS) were going to replace the ILS, with a calculated but very accurate glideslope. But I've certainly not seen that.
Umm.. translate please?FAA dropped the term LAAS about a decade ago, and went with the ICAO term GBAS. There are some GLS approaches at Newark and Houston, probably a bunch in Europe too.
Interesting that there’s very little cross-over between GBAS and SBAS with heavy commercial ops versus GA. The only explanation I ever got was that operators of Boeing and Airbus equipment rarely operate at airports not fully supported by ILS. Already being RNAV equipped, WAAS offers nothing that the heavies aren’t already capable of. GBAS is of interest because it offers the promise of CAT 2 and CAT 3 approaches; something WAAS LPV will never be able to accomplish.
Unlike an ILS, LPV is not monitored.LPV counts for currency training but not alternate planning. Go figure.
Aha! That makes sense. One of those things that affects the use of even an ILS for alternate planing.Unlike an ILS, LPV is not monitored.
FAA-Federal Aviation AdministrationUmm.. translate please?
Tim
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GBAS, SBAS and GLS is what through me.
Why will SBAS based LPV never get Cat 2 or 3?
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Physics....
In contrast, GBAS has a few reference stations located on the airport, transmitting corrections to a single computer which transmits the corrections on a VHF frequency to the aircraft. There is much less processing and data transmission taking place, so the GBAS receiver is alerted to integrity issues sooner, a necessity the faster and closer your are to the ground.
Basically the same thing as an ILS. It’s nice because you can fly to a podunk airport and go down to ILS mins.I've never had the opportunity to fly an LPV.
Unlike an ILS, LPV is not monitored.
Unlike an ILS, LPV is not monitored.
That means there's some device that's verifying the integrity of the signal that will notify ATC (and then the pilot) when the system is out of limits. With LPV, your GPS receiver determines the integrity as you are receiving it.Instrument noob here. Hi. What does monitoring an ILS mean? What are the operational considerations for flying a non-monitored ILS?
Well strictly, it means little to you other than you need to be careful flying that ILS. However, what will usually happen with unmonitored navaids is they'll be publicized or notam'd against being usable for designation as an alternate. Note that the "alternate" rules are purely a filing/fuel planning exercise. If you can't make your destination for whatever reason, it's the discretion of the pilot where to go instead.My home field (HEF - Manassas, VA) recently had the tower hours cut back to 8a-4p with a slew of accompanying notams. One of which is a notam stating the ILS is not monitored from 4p - 8a.
The monitor can be remote to a nearby ATC facility such as the overlying approach control. If it's not monitored, again, that doesn't mean it's unusable, but typically blocked from being a designated alternate.It also begs the question - if the ILS is only monitored by tower personnel, who monitors the ILS at non towered fields? Arg. So confused.