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![]() I was just reading Don Brown's latest (6/22) on avweb: http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/189944-1.html This column is about NORDO IFR procedures. I like Don's columns and find their nitpickiness to be consistent with safe flying, if a little bit annoying. But in this column, two things stuck out at me as odd. First: Flight plan was: HKY..BZM.V20.SUG.V185.SOT.V136.VXV..TYS VXV is an IAF for TYS. Don's interpretation of the AIM is that since the pilot was almost certainly cleared to TYS, then that's his clearance limit. The regs say fly to your clearance limit, and initiate your approach at the ETA. That means a pilot would fly to VXV (his IAF), fly to the airport (?!), fly back to VXV, then do full approach. It seems a tad ridiculous, no? Second: Descent. We all know the rules about staying at the highest of our last clearance, the MEA, or an altitude given in an EFC. If we filed for 15000 and the airport is at, say, sea level, there's a lot of altitude to lose. When and where is the right time to do this? I'm embarassed to say I never really thought about it much before. Usually, controllers descend us gradually. Or if we're VFR we descend ourselves gradually. But the rules make it clear you're to keep the altitude up until ... when? When you start the approach? Come down in a hold? where? He bring's this up also questioning this, and mentioning the AIM paragraph that says these proecedures don't always fit; use your own judgement, etc. Still, I'd like to know what I was going to do in this situation. What would you do? -- dave j -- jacobowitz73 --at-- yahoo --dot-- com |
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