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#1
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I got the following from the FAA on their email broadcast.. its normally
the way they send out info about local safety seminars.. Interesting how they are addressing a local traffic issue on a national level.. prudent? or overkill? Dave Teterboro Airport Operations & The Teterboro 5 Departure ALTITUDE DEVIATIONS DURING IFR DEPATURE PROCEDURES AT TETERBORO AIRPORT ARE CAUSING POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS. IF YOU PLAN TO OPERATE INTO OR OUT OF THE TETERBORO AIRPORT (KTEB), PLEASE UNDERSTAND, AND COMPLY WITH THE TETERBORO FIVE DEPARTURE PROCEDURE ALTITUDES. There have been many altitude deviations by pilots flying this procedure, and they are causing. POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS WITH NEWARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ARRIVALS. For complete information, click on the following link: http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event...of_TEB_5-2.pdf Completing a flight or maintenance action safely is a complex process. Use the materials at FAASafey.gov to sharpen and maintain your skills. |
#2
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Uhhh...
Airplanes can fly a long way. A lot of them can fly all of the way to Teterboro. And it is probably the people who fly a long way to Teterboro who are causing most of the problems, not those who are based there. Very prudent indeed... "Dave S" wrote in message ink.net... I got the following from the FAA on their email broadcast.. its normally the way they send out info about local safety seminars.. Interesting how they are addressing a local traffic issue on a national level.. prudent? or overkill? Dave Teterboro Airport Operations & The Teterboro 5 Departure ALTITUDE DEVIATIONS DURING IFR DEPATURE PROCEDURES AT TETERBORO AIRPORT ARE CAUSING POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS. IF YOU PLAN TO OPERATE INTO OR OUT OF THE TETERBORO AIRPORT (KTEB), PLEASE UNDERSTAND, AND COMPLY WITH THE TETERBORO FIVE DEPARTURE PROCEDURE ALTITUDES. There have been many altitude deviations by pilots flying this procedure, and they are causing. POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS WITH NEWARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ARRIVALS. For complete information, click on the following link: http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event...of_TEB_5-2.pdf Completing a flight or maintenance action safely is a complex process. Use the materials at FAASafey.gov to sharpen and maintain your skills. |
#3
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They have sent local mail out on the national list by accident before. Maybe
this time too. I got it in Minnesota. On 3/11/05 5:21 PM, Dave S wrote the following: I got the following from the FAA on their email broadcast.. its normally the way they send out info about local safety seminars.. Interesting how they are addressing a local traffic issue on a national level.. prudent? or overkill? Dave Teterboro Airport Operations & The Teterboro 5 Departure ALTITUDE DEVIATIONS DURING IFR DEPATURE PROCEDURES AT TETERBORO AIRPORT ARE CAUSING POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS. IF YOU PLAN TO OPERATE INTO OR OUT OF THE TETERBORO AIRPORT (KTEB), PLEASE UNDERSTAND, AND COMPLY WITH THE TETERBORO FIVE DEPARTURE PROCEDURE ALTITUDES. There have been many altitude deviations by pilots flying this procedure, and they are causing. POTENTIAL MID AIR COLLISIONS WITH NEWARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ARRIVALS. For complete information, click on the following link: http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event...of_TEB_5-2.pdf Completing a flight or maintenance action safely is a complex process. Use the materials at FAASafey.gov to sharpen and maintain your skills. |
#4
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![]() Dave S wrote: I got the following from the FAA on their email broadcast.. its normally the way they send out info about local safety seminars.. Interesting how they are addressing a local traffic issue on a national level.. prudent? or overkill? Not overkill at all because of the nature of the operations at TEB. Jet aircraft come and go nonstop to and from all parts of the country. Lots of flights from the Los Angeles area everyday non-stop to TEB, for example. Part of the problem, I suspect, is modern FMS/LNAV aircraft trying to fly a ancient round-dial aircraft departure procedure, especially one that includes an NDB crossing and an NDB bearing crossing. |
#5
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#6
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![]() "Lakeview Bill" wrote in message m... Uhhh... Airplanes can fly a long way. A lot of them can fly all of the way to Teterboro. They use a departure procedure to fly to Teterboro? :-) |
#7
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![]() Doug Carter wrote: wrote: Part of the problem, I suspect, is modern FMS/LNAV aircraft trying to fly a ancient round-dial aircraft departure procedure, especially one that includes an NDB crossing and an NDB bearing crossing. I would think the FMS has the DP in its database. It sounded like the problem was blowing altitude, not route. True. But, each FMS vendor has their own idea of how to code a non-RNAV DP, which has resulted in some pretty serious problems from time to time. It almost caused CFIT with a "round dial" DP at Reno being misapplied by crews using FMS/LNAV. With RNAV DPs the vendors are pretty well forced to code it correctly. Even then, some boxes will lead a fly-by WP differently than others. As to TEB, some crews perhaps busted an altitude because it appears they have passed the restricting fix when, in fact, they have not. Based on similar situations at other locations, it is certainly one possibility for an apparent pattern. If this were just one or two flights, we wouldn't be hearing about it. |
#8
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I got the following from the FAA on their email broadcast.. its normally
the way they send out info about local safety seminars.. Interesting how they are addressing a local traffic issue on a national level.. prudent? or overkill? If the problem is restricted to (mainly) TEB departures, this tells me there is something wrong with the procedure. Yes, the pilots should fly it correctly and should not blow altitudes and all, but the design of the procedure makes it easy or difficult, and easy is better (all other things being equal). Our theater recently replaced the sound system with new equipment where the buttons (play, fast forward, etc) are all in non-standard and unexpected positions. It is =far= easier to make a mistake, and of course they blame the sound guy (after all, the buttons are labelled). But the problem (and the best solution) lies elsewhere. Jose -- Math is a game. The object of the game is to figure out the rules. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#9
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Jose wrote:
If the problem is restricted to (mainly) TEB departures, this tells me there is something wrong with the procedure. Yes, the pilots should fly it correctly and should not blow altitudes and all, but the design of the procedure makes it easy or difficult, and easy is better (all other things being equal). This is certainly one of the more complex procedures I've seen. It reads: TAKE-OFF RUNWAY 19: Climb runway heading until leaving 800 feet, then turn right heading 280^. Maintain 1500 feet until crossing the TEB R-250 and passing TEB 4.5 DME, then climb and maintain 2000 feet (non-DME aircraft maintain 1500 feet until crossing PNJ NDB 015^ bearing, then climb and maintain 2000 feet.) You're need to meet two restrictions at once (get past a radial and get past a DME arc). And for those non-DME types who's ADF skills may be a bit rusty, well, let's just say that I don't think I'd like to be working an NDB bearing crossing problem while turning, climbing, and talking to departure all at the same time. This would be so much easier to fly if they invented an RNAV waypoint at the right place and said: "Climb runway heading until leaving 800, then climb to 1500 direct FUBAR. After crossing FUBAR, maintain 2000. They could leave the old procedure in place for non-RNAV aircraft. I think the other thing that makes the FAA so worked up about procedure busts here is the proximity to Newark. The two airports are only 10 miles apart, and departures off 19 are pointed almost directly at EWR. The multiple "step-up" fixes are to keep you below the arrivals into EWR's 22L & 22R. There are very few places where leveling off a few hundred feet high on an initial climbout is so likely to result in a separation bust. I can't imagine how often arrivals into EWR get TCAS alerts due to traffic climbing out of TEB. |
#10
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