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#1
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The Garmin 430 documentation says that you can use the GPS for course
guidance on an ILS/LOC up until the final approach fix. Where exactly does the approval for this come from? My inclination would have been that in absence of an overlay, you could not use GPS anywhere after the IAF. Also, assuming this approval is legit, shouldn't this extend to a non-overlay VOR approach? |
#2
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![]() Greg Esres wrote: The Garmin 430 documentation says that you can use the GPS for course guidance on an ILS/LOC up until the final approach fix. Where exactly does the approval for this come from? My inclination would have been that in absence of an overlay, you could not use GPS anywhere after the IAF. Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach sensitivity until the beginning of a final approach segment for either a stand-alone RNAV approach or an approved overlay. So, you do not need localizer guidance until the P-FAF for an ILS approach or the NPA FAF for a localizer approach. Because overlay is not approved for a localizer, the localizer itself has to be used for the ILS or localizer final approach segment. The "flip-side" is also true, which is what Garmin states. Also, assuming this approval is legit, shouldn't this extend to a non-overlay VOR approach? True, it could, but the vendors haven't seen that as a real-world issue. |
#3
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Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach
sensitivity until the beginning of a final approach segment I was sure they were, but I'm concerned about how to demonstrate this correctness to others. The AIM says nothing about this. I accept that flying the localizer outbound for the PT does not require approach sensitivity and that the protected area is wide on the initial segment, but I shouldn't have to know these things in order to know what I can do with this box. I'm mostly concerned with checkrides. Is there anything other than Garmin documentation that can demonstrate this is a legal thing to do? " non-overlay VOR approach?" True, it could, but the vendors haven't seen that as a real-world issue. I haven't done this in the real airplane, but on the simulator, the box will advise changing to Vloc once established on the inbound course of a VOR, but will not switch over. In fact, it goes down to approach sensitivity, but doesn't indicate approach RAIM. Would you argue that using the GPS for course guidance up to this point is legal? Thanks! |
#4
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![]() Greg Esres wrote: Garmin is correct. You don't need approach RAIM or approach sensitivity until the beginning of a final approach segment I was sure they were, but I'm concerned about how to demonstrate this correctness to others. The AIM says nothing about this. I accept that flying the localizer outbound for the PT does not require approach sensitivity and that the protected area is wide on the initial segment, but I shouldn't have to know these things in order to know what I can do with this box. I'm mostly concerned with checkrides. Is there anything other than Garmin documentation that can demonstrate this is a legal thing to do? " non-overlay VOR approach?" True, it could, but the vendors haven't seen that as a real-world issue. I haven't done this in the real airplane, but on the simulator, the box will advise changing to Vloc once established on the inbound course of a VOR, but will not switch over. In fact, it goes down to approach sensitivity, but doesn't indicate approach RAIM. Would you argue that using the GPS for course guidance up to this point is legal? If you can retrieve it from a current database with an IFR approach-approved GPS, it is legal to use. You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach. |
#5
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You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up
and ILS approach. Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs to come from the underlying navaid at all times. That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the permissiveness of the manual. |
#6
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You can "use" the GPS anywhere you like for guidance.
Not really on target. The issue is using GPS as your primary source of navigation on an instument approach. |
#7
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There is no appraoch RAIM on an ILS.
My understanding is that an IFR GPS always has RAIM, if the geometry of the satellites permits. Approach RAIM just has narrower tolerances. |
#8
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On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 19:21:07 GMT, Greg Esres
wrote: You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach. Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs to come from the underlying navaid at all times. That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the permissiveness of the manual. Same issues I'm attempting to work through in my thread "Yet more GPS substitution questions", cept I was looking at a VOR/DME. I'll just merge into this one - thanks. |
#9
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![]() Greg Esres wrote: You will note the warning message Garmin provides when you pull up and ILS approach. Yes, and I consider it to contradict what the manual says. The note says for "monitoring" only, insinuating that approach guidance needs to come from the underlying navaid at all times. That's part of the reason I asked the question. I have difficulty explaining away the inconsistency between the note and the permissiveness of the manual. You should discuss that with Garmin. The restriction is meant to apply to the final approach segment only. It doesn't bother me because I know it's the same for FMS/LNAV in a 777 or a Garmin 430 in a Cessna 182. You are using terminal mode except for the final approach segment. |
#10
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What exactly does "primary source" mean, anyway?
[...] If the VOR happens to be off a degree or two, and indicates a turn in one direction, and the GPS indicates a turn in then other direction, that the pilot must follow the "primary" device, even though it's indicating the wrong thing? Yes, I think so. If you have two devices with contrary indications, you need to decide which to believe. If an accident occurs because you believed the GPS (and it was wrong) the FAA busts you for not following rules. IF an accident occurs because you believed the ADF, the FAA busts you for being careless and reckless. ![]() |
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