MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
Yup. I’m all about redundancy.
And the ability to fly a stabilized approach with one engine inop.
Best to get it all out of your system at once.Talk about having a bad day
A question for those who are doing zero-ceiling zero visibility approaches in a sim: does your sim have realistic errors in the baro altimeter? It seems to me that would make a lot of difference, if you're trying to flare without seeing a runway, without a radar altimeter.
I've got two baro altimeters on my panel, PFD tape and round-dial backup. And despite a recent pito-static calibration, they disagree, by varying amounts, as much as 60' disagreement. So I'm guessing there's no reason to think one could rely on a baro altimeter, to within 60', in choosing how high to flare.
On my sim (X-Plane 11) I can set the field barometric pressure and then set my panel altimeter to something different than that. In the video I had the field set at 29.91" and my aircraft altimeter baro set to 29.96" for the C172 and 1015 hpa (29.97" inHg) for the SR22T.A question for those who are doing zero-ceiling zero visibility approaches in a sim: does your sim have realistic errors in the baro altimeter? It seems to me that would make a lot of difference, if you're trying to flare without seeing a runway, without a radar altimeter.
I've got two baro altimeters on my panel, PFD tape and round-dial backup. And despite a recent pito-static calibration, they disagree, by varying amounts, as much as 60' disagreement. So I'm guessing there's no reason to think one could rely on a baro altimeter, to within 60', in choosing how high to flare.
I can autoland in 300 rvr. You?Lol. Probably is safer in my Bonanza with superior avionics to any 121 airplane out there
Please remember, starting at Number 1. Ceiling means NOTHING on an approach. Nothing, nada, zero, zilch.A question for those who are doing zero-ceiling zero visibility approaches in a sim: does your sim have realistic errors in the baro altimeter? It seems to me that would make a lot of difference, if you're trying to flare without seeing a runway, without a radar altimeter.
I've got two baro altimeters on my panel, PFD tape and round-dial backup. And despite a recent pito-static calibration, they disagree, by varying amounts, as much as 60' disagreement. So I'm guessing there's no reason to think one could rely on a baro altimeter, to within 60', in choosing how high to flare.
Please remember, starting at Number 1. Ceiling means NOTHING on an approach. Nothing, nada, zero, zilch.
Um...You’ve lost me. What is Number 1?
plus not worrying about icing conditions and missed approaches are no big deal.Yup. I’m all about redundancy.
Gonna bet any pilot that has actually flown to places has run into weather that didn't meet the forecast. Winds 40 gusting 55 at my destination, and similar at my alternate, really got my anxiety going. Uneventful landing, using about fifty feet of runway.I’m sorry to the person that ignored alternate requirements and illegally put themselves in this pickle.
how about a different approach. Follow the FARs and reduce the likelihood of getting yourself in this mess to begin with.
Even in a jet I wouldn’t initiate a single engine approach into KASE, but you can actually get to Lindz at well below 14,000.Some years ago, I did practice fly a one engine LOC DME at KASE in the Seneca, in VMC, at 4200 lbs weight. On one blower at Doype (DME 7.1, 10,700 msl) (missed is 10220), I can make LINDZ at 14,000 but not from below. Of course, that is in a clean airframe, not one that has been iced and de-iced.
So for me, 10.8 is pretty much the end of the approach.
I have not experimented with Holding at LINDZ in a climb. Too much tall granite about; I would think holding inbound @ LINDZ on the 303 deg back course would be the emergency procedure if 14,000 is not made. But, too much "ifs".
I just don't chance that situation.
One Blower: RIL here we come.....
The "out" if I'm an idiot, is DOWNY IAF @ 12.2, @ KRIL. THINK ahead.
.... If one is within range, go to the big airport. Class B or maybe C. The one with the 10,000’ long 150’ wide runway and a melt your eyeballs HIRL lighting system. Your odds of a safe landing would be even better.
As long as the runway lights weren’t blue.That’s what I did one time back around 1973-ish. Destination was KLWM, I was coming back from Detroit at night in an Aztec with a huge tailwind. When the sun came up in the east, I could see everything was socked in, everywhere within fuel range was was essentially zero-zero. I shot the ILS - raw data, no AP or FD - to 4R or 4L (can’t remember which, but a very wide, very long runway) at Boston Logan Airport. The RVR was in actuality no more than about 300 ft (maybe less) but the old PATCO controllers took care of me when they knew - without me specifically saying - that I had nowhere else to go. “Merrimack 645, RVR is coming up, now 600 feet..... now 800 feet..... now it’s 1200 feet..... ok it’s now 1800 feet, fly heading [whatever], intercept the loc, you’re cleared for the approach. Tower says you are cleared to land too, you’re the only one inbound.” And eventually, just before the wheels squeaked on, I was almost blinded by those HIRLS. Nice wide runway too, good thing because I wasn’t quite on the center-line! All those practice approaches under the hood to zero-zero that we did back in the Olden Days finally paid off. But I did need a Follow Me truck to lead me to the old Butler Aviation FBO there at KBOS.
Cool story, I got my license back at LWM, was a short bike ride from my dad's houseThat’s what I did one time back around 1973-ish. Destination was KLWM, I was coming back from Detroit at night in an Aztec with a huge tailwind. When the sun came up in the east, I could see everything was socked in, everywhere within fuel range was was essentially zero-zero. I shot the ILS - raw data, no AP or FD - to 4R or 4L (can’t remember which, but a very wide, very long runway) at Boston Logan Airport. The RVR was in actuality no more than about 300 ft (maybe less) but the old PATCO controllers took care of me when they knew - without me specifically saying - that I had nowhere else to go. “Merrimack 645, RVR is coming up, now 600 feet..... now 800 feet..... now it’s 1200 feet..... ok it’s now 1800 feet, fly heading [whatever], intercept the loc, you’re cleared for the approach. Tower says you are cleared to land too, you’re the only one inbound.” And eventually, just before the wheels squeaked on, I was almost blinded by those HIRLS. Nice wide runway too, good thing because I wasn’t quite on the center-line! All those practice approaches under the hood to zero-zero that we did back in the Olden Days finally paid off. But I did need a Follow Me truck to lead me to the old Butler Aviation FBO there at KBOS.
I can autoland in 300 rvr. You?
That’s what I did one time back around 1973-ish. Destination was KLWM, I was coming back from Detroit at night in an Aztec with a huge tailwind. When the sun came up in the east, I could see everything was socked in, everywhere within fuel range was was essentially zero-zero. I shot the ILS - raw data, no AP or FD - to 4R or 4L (can’t remember which, but a very wide, very long runway) at Boston Logan Airport. The RVR was in actuality no more than about 300 ft (maybe less) but the old PATCO controllers took care of me when they knew - without me specifically saying - that I had nowhere else to go. “Merrimack 645, RVR is coming up, now 600 feet..... now 800 feet..... now it’s 1200 feet..... ok it’s now 1800 feet, fly heading [whatever], intercept the loc, you’re cleared for the approach. Tower says you are cleared to land too, you’re the only one inbound.” And eventually, just before the wheels squeaked on, I was almost blinded by those HIRLS. Nice wide runway too, good thing because I wasn’t quite on the center-line! All those practice approaches under the hood to zero-zero that we did back in the Olden Days finally paid off. But I did need a Follow Me truck to lead me to the old Butler Aviation FBO there at KBOS.
I’m apparently uninformed about small airplanes certified for autoland, but... certified for cat 3 I’m guessing is a bit different. Perhaps, I’m just not aware.Not legally, but autoland is certified in various light GA planes.
Totally agree for part 121, probably 135. No clue about 91.Pretty sure cat 3 is plane, pilot and airfield. And probably also an operating certificate stating how pilots are trained and kept current.
I
I’m apparently uninformed about small airplanes certified for autoland, but... certified for cat 3 I’m guessing is a bit different. Perhaps, I’m just not aware.
Which small airplanes are 300 rvr certified? I’m just curious.
On a side note, if I were a small plane GA pilot I would not know where to go for cat certification. Heck, I don’t even know if part 91 pilots need authorization or if it’s airplane only.
I said autoland, not CAT III. I guess you don't even pay attention to avionics technology. Garmin has certified autoland on, at least, 3 light aircraft
As an emergency feature. Not for normal landings...
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That wasn't a qualification. The fact remains that airliners can't fly LPV approaches and many don't even have VNAV
Wrong. I fly one that can.
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E175? Do they actually let you fly them?
We can do more than you know.That wasn't a qualification. The fact remains that airliners can't fly LPV approaches and many don't even have VNAV
But hey! That 767 that can't even fly an RNAV SID can land itself at some airports!
But we can (I can) fly to 300 rvr. That, to the best of my knowledge, is way better than your pretty display allows you to do.That wasn't a qualification. The fact remains that airliners can't fly LPV approaches and many don't even have VNAV
But hey! That 767 that can't even fly an RNAV SID can land itself at some airports!
You’re a little big for those britches aren’t you...
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You really are living under a rock.That wasn't a qualification. The fact remains that airliners can't fly LPV approaches and many don't even have VNAV
But hey! That 767 that can't even fly an RNAV SID can land itself at some airports!
But we can (I can) fly to 300 rvr. That, to the best of my knowledge, is way better than your pretty display allows you to do.
Oh yeah, totally. You got it dude.
What are minimums? Ceiling means nothing. Cat 3 has no decision height. So what minimums are you talking about?At an airport that has an approach that allows it. And I can fly to much lower minimums at many more airports.