coma24
Line Up and Wait
why no NoPT on SBD NDB RWY 6?
Check out the SBD NDB RWY 6 approach from PDZ. Why does this IAF require a PT?
Check out the SBD NDB RWY 6 approach from PDZ. Why does this IAF require a PT?
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No. Absent the "NoPT" on the PDZ-SUDOC leg, as it is now printed, you do not meet any of the four criteria to automatically skip the PT, so the PT is required. Of course, as it stands, if you are an IFR GPS-equipped aircraft, the controller could under the new criteria established this year clear you "straight in" from PDZ, or, since SUDOC is a published IF, even send you direct to SUDOC at 3200 without going to PDZ first (as long as your turn onto intermediate segment at SUDOC would be less than 90 degrees), but you'd need to hear that from the controller in order to do so.I was leaning towards that as well. However, does the fact that PDZ is an IAF, and SUDOC is an IF mitigate the need for the PT, given that we're already established on the intermediate segment and we are NOT using PETIS as an IAF?
I agree -- so send them the email.My gut was and is that it's a charting error...especially given that all the other approaches have PDZ as an IAF, but none of them have PT's at all, making this one is an exception.
A procedure turn is not required when an approach can be made directly from a specified intermediate fix to the final approach fix. In such cases, the term “NoPT” is used with the appropriate course and altitude to denote that the procedure turn is not required
Exactly -- no "NoPT" on the segment, no automatic straight-in.The AIM actually covers the case I describe above, where the approach can be made from the intermediate approach segment direct to the FAF:
AIM 5-4-9(a)(6)
However, it does say that NoPT will be published in that case...so, that shoots down my potentially mitigating circumstance above (which I'm quite happy about).
Bingo. So send it.Determining if a PT is required is normally very simple. I'd be much happier for this to be a charting error than, "oh, you're not using PETIS as an IAF, so it doesn't apply." The AIM entry pretty much rules the latter option, so that leaves a charting error.
Super. Bet there's an FDC NOTAM on that one by COB tomorrow.Ron, I sent the email immediately after your first reply
Super. Bet there's an FDC NOTAM on that one by COB tomorrow.
Chart errors are safety-related, so they should attend to it.If there's anybody home at the FAA to issue it. The last thing I sent to the FAA got a "we'll get to it when we get our staff back" message.
Ronfour criteria to automatically skip the PT
Vectors are nice and they are typically given - if they have radar down to the level of the FAF intercept altitude. That's not always the case and when it's not, you can ask for one all you want but won't get it (an instrument student did that on his dual IFR cross country and the controller chuckled as much as I did).Please state these 4 criteria for me. The "when is a procedure turn really required" question seems to be a recurring issue for many of us. Seems it would be best to either request a vector or ask the controller if cleared straight in or for the procedure turn. Off the top of my head I can name 2 or possibly 3 of the 4 - "NoPT", receiving vectors, cleared straight in, and ???
No. Absent the "NoPT" on the PDZ-SUDOC leg, as it is now printed, you do not meet any of the four criteria to automatically skip the PT, so the PT is required. Of course, as it stands, if you are an IFR GPS-equipped aircraft, the controller could under the new criteria established this year clear you "straight in" from PDZ, or, since SUDOC is a published IF, even send you direct to SUDOC at 3200 without going to PDZ first (as long as your turn onto intermediate segment at SUDOC would be less than 90 degrees), but you'd need to hear that from the controller in order to do so.
I agree -- so send them the email.
Please state these 4 criteria for me.
You got three out of four, and the fourth is both the least common and the one usually forgotten.The "when is a procedure turn really required" question seems to be a recurring issue for many of us. Seems it would be best to either request a vector or ask the controller if cleared straight in or for the procedure turn. Off the top of my head I can name 2 or possibly 3 of the 4 - "NoPT", receiving vectors, cleared straight in, and ???
Sadly, experience tells us that controllers are not as familiar with the rules on this issue (or at least, what's on the approach charts in their areas) as one might hope they would be. But that's pretty well balanced by the number of pilots who don't understand it that well, either.Incidentally I have had ATC call and question why I did not do a procedure turn on an approach where the chart was clearly marked "NoPT" on the approach segment I was using.
Yes, that could happen if the pilot assumes something the controller hasn't said, or the controller assumes something s/he hasn't told the pilot. Since based on what I hear on the radio and what I read on the internet this happens more often than is good, it behooves all of us on both sides of the radio to speak up and make sure we know what the other side expects/is going to do before the aircraft reaches the fix.Here is another example of a current approach where the same confusion might occur if coming from the South:
http://155.178.201.160/d-tpp/1310/05063VDC.PDF
"Quality Checked", eh?
Same as Quality Inn motels.
I daresay the reason this one has slipped by is because very few people fly this approach. You'd need a working ADF receiver in the airplane, and those are few and far between at this point. That, and of those people, how many actually fly the approach from PDZ, rather than receiving a vector to final? And of THOSE people...how many realized there was a charting conflict? My guess is most pilots would assume a straight-in, or they'd query the controller and be cleared for the straight-in.
In other words, I'm guessing nobody cares
I don't see the little band on the toilet seat...
You'd need a working ADF receiver in the airplane, and those are few and far between at this point.
I haven't seen a working installed ADF in any client airplane for instrument training for about four years. It's to the point where I need to set up the sim and practice it on my own a couple of times a year just to stay sharp enough that I could teach it if necessary.What's an ADF?
I haven't seen a working installed ADF in any client airplane for instrument training for about four years. It's to the point where I need to set up the sim and practice it on my own a couple of times a year just to stay sharp enough that I could teach it if necessary.
We've got one and the last time (and only time) I turned it on it seemed to work well.I haven't seen a working installed ADF in any client airplane for instrument training for about four years. It's to the point where I need to set up the sim and practice it on my own a couple of times a year just to stay sharp enough that I could teach it if necessary.
NOTAM is going to be issued for this approach shortly, as Ron suspected.
This originally came up while one of my clients was shooting approaches at SBD on PilotEdge and I reminded him that, as charted, the PT was required, even though it made no sense. I say that because it speaks to my theory that this is not frequently flown in r/w
:applause:FDC 3/8757 - IAP SAN BERNADINO INTL, SAN BERNADINO, CA.NDB RWY 6 AMDT 1...ADD (NOPT) TO TERMINAL ROUTE PDZ VORTAC (IAF) TO SUDOC INT.CHANGE HELICOPTER NOTE TO READ: HELICOPTER VISIBILITY REDUCTION BELOW3/4 SM NOT AUTHORIZED.THIS IS NDB RWY 6 AMDT 1A. 18 OCT 19:37 2013 UNTIL PERM. CREATED: 18 OCT 19:482013
:applause: