View Full Version : Crossing an NDB 3 times on an approach?
November 28th 06, 09:03 PM
Would it make sense to cross an NDB 3 times in the completion of an
approach?
I'm thinking where there is a hold in lieu of a PT, you may cross the
NDB, complete a parallel hold entry, cross the NDB a second time, then
do a racetrack with timing and descent, then cross a third time as the
FAF....  Normal ops?
Jim Macklin
November 28th 06, 10:19 PM
You are officially "in the hold" the first time you cross 
the fix {in this case the NDB or a VOR} and if you're 
established on the inbound course after intercepting the 
course after your teardrop or direct entry, you can proceed 
inbound or you have the option at pilot's discretion to go 
around until you're established and ready.  You can descend 
to the approach altitude once you have established inbound, 
which is when the needle on a VOR or the course on the NDB 
has placed you on the inbound course.
Had the Hendrick pilots gone three times over the NDB [LOM} 
they would not have died.
> wrote in message 
...
| Would it make sense to cross an NDB 3 times in the 
completion of an
| approach?
|
| I'm thinking where there is a hold in lieu of a PT, you 
may cross the
| NDB, complete a parallel hold entry, cross the NDB a 
second time, then
| do a racetrack with timing and descent, then cross a third 
time as the
| FAF....  Normal ops?
Sam Spade
November 28th 06, 11:31 PM
Jim Macklin wrote:
> You are officially "in the hold" the first time you cross 
> the fix {in this case the NDB or a VOR} and if you're 
> established on the inbound course after intercepting the 
> course after your teardrop or direct entry, you can proceed 
> inbound or you have the option at pilot's discretion to go 
> around until you're established and ready.  
If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn (bold 
type, and you have been cleared for the approach, you are only allowed 
one circuit in the hold unless you obtain a clearance for more than one 
circuit.
(AIM 5-4-9 a 4)
Jim Macklin
November 28th 06, 11:47 PM
if the altitude change requires more than 500 fpm, the pilot 
should request the extra turns.  Further the pilot should 
not be rushed, if not properly established the options are 
to request extra turns or go missed.  At a busy airport, the 
miss may be needed because of traffic, at a place where you 
are the only traffic, ATC will approve what ever you need.
A pilot should know his limitations and those of his 
airplane.  If you have a lot of altitude to loose, you know 
that before you get to the fix and should ask for time and 
distance to allow this.  Most controllers will as a routine 
clearance authorize long legs on the initial clearance if 
the airplane is not already at the initial approach 
altitude.
"Sam Spade" > wrote in message 
...
| Jim Macklin wrote:
| > You are officially "in the hold" the first time you 
cross
| > the fix {in this case the NDB or a VOR} and if you're
| > established on the inbound course after intercepting the
| > course after your teardrop or direct entry, you can 
proceed
| > inbound or you have the option at pilot's discretion to 
go
| > around until you're established and ready.
|
| If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure 
turn (bold
| type, and you have been cleared for the approach, you are 
only allowed
| one circuit in the hold unless you obtain a clearance for 
more than one
| circuit.
|
| (AIM 5-4-9 a 4)
|
Jose[_1_]
November 29th 06, 12:01 AM
> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
.... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, you 
just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
Jose
-- 
"There are 3 secrets to the perfect landing. Unfortunately, nobody knows 
what they are."  - (mike).
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 12:18 AM
Jim Macklin wrote:
> if the altitude change requires more than 500 fpm, the pilot 
> should request the extra turns.  Further the pilot should 
> not be rushed, if not properly established the options are 
> to request extra turns or go missed.  At a busy airport, the 
> miss may be needed because of traffic, at a place where you 
> are the only traffic, ATC will approve what ever you need.
> 
> A pilot should know his limitations and those of his 
> airplane.  If you have a lot of altitude to loose, you know 
> that before you get to the fix and should ask for time and 
> distance to allow this.  Most controllers will as a routine 
> clearance authorize long legs on the initial clearance if 
> the airplane is not already at the initial approach 
> altitude.
If the pilot needs it, requests it, and is granted the clearance, that 
is fine.
But, if he arrives at the course reversal hold on altitude, criteria 
will protect him from high descent rates.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 12:18 AM
Jose wrote:
>> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
> 
> 
> ... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, you 
> just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
> 
> Jose
Yep!
November 29th 06, 03:57 AM
Gentlemen, to recap, my example was with a parallel entry, where after
first crossing the ndb you are on the non holding side.  So where do
you start descent then?
Also, after the first 1 minute and turn back to the holding side, in
the direction of the ndb, you perhaps may decide not to intercept the
inbound course but proceed direct to the fix.  So now you proceed
straight in?
On Tue, 28 Nov 2006 14:31:01 -0800, Sam Spade >
wrote:
>Jim Macklin wrote:
>> You are officially "in the hold" the first time you cross 
>> the fix {in this case the NDB or a VOR} and if you're 
>> established on the inbound course after intercepting the 
>> course after your teardrop or direct entry, you can proceed 
>> inbound or you have the option at pilot's discretion to go 
>> around until you're established and ready.  
>
>If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn (bold 
>type, and you have been cleared for the approach, you are only allowed 
>one circuit in the hold unless you obtain a clearance for more than one 
>circuit.
>
>(AIM 5-4-9 a 4)
Jose[_1_]
November 29th 06, 04:30 AM
> Also, after the first 1 minute and turn back to the holding side, in
> the direction of the ndb, you perhaps may decide not to intercept the
> inbound course but proceed direct to the fix.  So now you proceed
> straight in?
While it's true that you don't have the benefit of a minute of flying to 
determine wind correction, when you are over the NDB you know exactly 
where you are and what direction you are facing.  If you've approached 
it with a 30 degree intercept, you may well have a good idea of what the 
winds are.  So, yes, I don't see any danger (in most situations) in 
proceeding straight in.
This is, of course, different from saying that this is what the rules say.
Jose
-- 
"There are 3 secrets to the perfect landing. Unfortunately, nobody knows 
what they are."  - (mike).
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
Jim Macklin
November 29th 06, 05:17 AM
That is true, if at the altitude.  For example in the case 
of the Hendrick crash, the BE 200 was at 5.000 and the 
initial is 3600.  Then the crew got lost over the LOM and 
just did a 360 and never went outbound.
"Sam Spade" > wrote in message 
...
| Jim Macklin wrote:
|
| > if the altitude change requires more than 500 fpm, the 
pilot
| > should request the extra turns.  Further the pilot 
should
| > not be rushed, if not properly established the options 
are
| > to request extra turns or go missed.  At a busy airport, 
the
| > miss may be needed because of traffic, at a place where 
you
| > are the only traffic, ATC will approve what ever you 
need.
| >
| > A pilot should know his limitations and those of his
| > airplane.  If you have a lot of altitude to loose, you 
know
| > that before you get to the fix and should ask for time 
and
| > distance to allow this.  Most controllers will as a 
routine
| > clearance authorize long legs on the initial clearance 
if
| > the airplane is not already at the initial approach
| > altitude.
|
| If the pilot needs it, requests it, and is granted the 
clearance, that
| is fine.
|
| But, if he arrives at the course reversal hold on 
altitude, criteria
| will protect him from high descent rates.
Roger[_4_]
November 29th 06, 11:16 AM
On Tue, 28 Nov 2006 14:31:01 -0800, Sam Spade >
wrote:
>Jim Macklin wrote:
>> You are officially "in the hold" the first time you cross 
>> the fix {in this case the NDB or a VOR} and if you're 
>> established on the inbound course after intercepting the 
>> course after your teardrop or direct entry, you can proceed 
>> inbound or you have the option at pilot's discretion to go 
>> around until you're established and ready.  
>
>If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn (bold 
>type, and you have been cleared for the approach, you are only allowed 
>one circuit in the hold unless you obtain a clearance for more than one 
>circuit.
>
That is also a required reporting point.
>(AIM 5-4-9 a 4)
Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com
Roger[_4_]
November 29th 06, 11:25 AM
On Tue, 28 Nov 2006 15:18:18 -0800, Sam Spade >
wrote:
>Jose wrote:
>
>>> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
>> 
>> 
>> ... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, you 
>> just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
>> 
>> Jose
>
>Yep!
Established inbound is a reporting point as I recall.
Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com
Ron Natalie
November 29th 06, 01:37 PM
 wrote:
> Would it make sense to cross an NDB 3 times in the completion of an
> approach?
> 
> I'm thinking where there is a hold in lieu of a PT, you may cross the
> NDB, complete a parallel hold entry, cross the NDB a second time, then
> do a racetrack with timing and descent, then cross a third time as the
> FAF....  Normal ops?
Once you've made the hold entry and are inbound at the fix, you've
completed the hold.  You don't need to go around again.
Ron Natalie
November 29th 06, 01:39 PM
Sam Spade wrote:
> Jose wrote:
> 
>>> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
>>
>>
>> ... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, you 
>> just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
>>
>> Jose
> 
> Yep!\
THE WORDS FROM THE AIM:
The holding pattern maneuver is completed when the aircraft is 
established on the inbound course after executing the appropriate entry.\
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:13 PM
Jim Macklin wrote:
> That is true, if at the altitude.  For example in the case 
> of the Hendrick crash, the BE 200 was at 5.000 and the 
> initial is 3600.  Then the crew got lost over the LOM and 
> just did a 360 and never went outbound.
>
You're a thousand feet high on both counts.  They were told to hold at 
4,000 and both the initial (minimum holding altitude) and intermediate 
altitudes are 2,600.
 From the NTSN report:
"As the airplane approached MTV, an air traffic controller advised the 
flight crew that the airplane was second in line for the localizer 
runway 30 approach. The controller instructed the pilots to hold 'as 
published' on the localizer course at 4,000 feet mean sea level (msl)2 
and to expect a 28-minute delay in the holding pattern. The flight crew
requested 5-mile legs in the holding pattern, and the controller 
pproved 5- or 10-milelegs at the crew’s discretion."
"At 1224:19, while the accident airplane was still turning right to the 
outbound leg of the holding pattern, the controller asked the flight 
crew if the airplane was established in the holding pattern, and the 
crew confirmed, 'we’re established.' At 1224:26, the controller cleared 
the airplane for the localizer runway 30 approach and requested that the
flight crew advise him when the airplane was inbound on the approach. 
The airplane then completed a continuous right turn toward the inbound 
course and crossed the BALES LOM at an altitude of 3,900 feet."
In a case like this the holding pattern's primary purpose was to absorb 
a traffic delay with course reversal being adjunct to that requirement.
The crew had just turned outbound when they received an unexcepted early 
approach clearance, and they were not much higher than the two feeder 
altitudes.  Under AIM 5-9-4, they received the approach clearance *after 
  crossing the course-reversal/holding fix so they were cleared to fly a 
full 1 minute pattern (the 10 mile pattern may have applied only at 
4,000).  So, with 3 minutes to loose 1,400 feet, they should have been 
able to do that, but they did need the full 1-minute pattern to do that. 
  And, if they though 467 feet per mile was too steep (within the 
maximum permitted by TERPs, though) they could have request yet another 
circuit.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:16 PM
Roger wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Nov 2006 15:18:18 -0800, Sam Spade >
> wrote:
> 
> 
>>Jose wrote:
>>
>>
>>>>If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
>>>
>>>
>>>... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, you 
>>>just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
>>>
>>>Jose
>>
>>Yep!
> 
> 
> Established inbound is a reporting point as I recall.
>
Only if ATC requests it.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:18 PM
Ron Natalie wrote:
> Sam Spade wrote:
> 
>> Jose wrote:
>>
>>>> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, 
>>> you just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
>>>
>>> Jose
>>
>>
>> Yep!\
> 
> 
> THE WORDS FROM THE AIM:
> 
> The holding pattern maneuver is completed when the aircraft is 
> established on the inbound course after executing the appropriate entry.\
That's what I meant by "yep!" to Jose question.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:19 PM
 wrote:
> Gentlemen, to recap, my example was with a parallel entry, where after
> first crossing the ndb you are on the non holding side.  So where do
> you start descent then?
When you roll out inbound.
> Also, after the first 1 minute and turn back to the holding side, in
> the direction of the ndb, you perhaps may decide not to intercept the
> inbound course but proceed direct to the fix.  So now you proceed
> straight in?
Yes, you're still inbound in the holding pattern.
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:23 PM
Jose wrote:
>> Also, after the first 1 minute and turn back to the holding side, in
>> the direction of the ndb, you perhaps may decide not to intercept the
>> inbound course but proceed direct to the fix.  So now you proceed
>> straight in?
> 
> 
> While it's true that you don't have the benefit of a minute of flying to 
> determine wind correction, when you are over the NDB you know exactly 
> where you are and what direction you are facing.  If you've approached 
> it with a 30 degree intercept, you may well have a good idea of what the 
> winds are.  So, yes, I don't see any danger (in most situations) in 
> proceeding straight in.
> 
> This is, of course, different from saying that this is what the rules say.
> 
>
The difference is because the proper execution of a holding pattern 
(especially a course reversal holding pattern on an IAP) requires flying 
inbound on course. If the pilot elects to fly offcourse inbound, he has 
nonetheless used up his one circuit in the hold (absent further 
clearance to a second circuit).
Sam Spade
November 29th 06, 04:26 PM
Ron Natalie wrote:
>  wrote:
> 
>> Would it make sense to cross an NDB 3 times in the completion of an
>> approach?
>>
>> I'm thinking where there is a hold in lieu of a PT, you may cross the
>> NDB, complete a parallel hold entry, cross the NDB a second time, then
>> do a racetrack with timing and descent, then cross a third time as the
>> FAF....  Normal ops?
> 
> 
> Once you've made the hold entry and are inbound at the fix, you've
> completed the hold.  You don't need to go around again.
If you have approach clearance you can't go around again without an 
amended clearance.
Ron Natalie
November 30th 06, 01:52 PM
Sam Spade wrote:
> Ron Natalie wrote:
> 
>> Sam Spade wrote:
>>
>>> Jose wrote:
>>>
>>>>> If the hold is for course reversal in lieu of a procedure turn
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ... so if you enter teardrop, turn and establish yourself inbound, 
>>>> you just continue inbound?  The teardrop entry counts as a circuit?
>>>>
>>>> Jose
>>>
>>>
>>> Yep!\
>>
>>
>> THE WORDS FROM THE AIM:
>>
>> The holding pattern maneuver is completed when the aircraft is 
>> established on the inbound course after executing the appropriate entry.\
> 
> That's what I meant by "yep!" to Jose question.
Yeah, I knew that...just amplifying on the requirement.
November 30th 06, 02:25 PM
Sam, you can't start descent during the turn once you cross over onto
the holding side?
On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 07:19:56 -0800, Sam Spade >
wrote:
 wrote:
>> Gentlemen, to recap, my example was with a parallel entry, where after
>> first crossing the ndb you are on the non holding side.  So where do
>> you start descent then?
>When you roll out inbound.
>
Sam Spade
November 30th 06, 03:49 PM
 wrote:
> Sam, you can't start descent during the turn once you cross over onto
> the holding side?
No.  The protected airspace for the holding pattern is a giant oval 
(relatively speaking) that is much larger than the intermediate segment 
that underlies it.  Once you leave the minimum altitude shown for the 
hold you must be within the confines of the intermediate segment.
This is a simplification of the TERPs contructions, but it makes the point.
> 
> On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 07:19:56 -0800, Sam Spade >
> wrote:
> 
> 
 wrote:
>>
>>>Gentlemen, to recap, my example was with a parallel entry, where after
>>>first crossing the ndb you are on the non holding side.  So where do
>>>you start descent then?
> 
> 
> 
>>When you roll out inbound.
>>
> 
>
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