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I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that
happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you recognize a mistake when you make it again. -- F. P. Jones |
#2
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In article ,
(Paul Tomblin) wrote: I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? There's probably less paperwork and red tape involved to just notam something OTS than to get it revoked. "We don't have to make sense, we're the FAA". |
#3
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On 05/27/07 15:37, Roy Smith wrote:
In article , (Paul Tomblin) wrote: I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? There's probably less paperwork and red tape involved to just notam something OTS than to get it revoked. "We don't have to make sense, we're the FAA". Hmmm, I wonder. When they pulled the NDB approach at KSAC (Sacramento Executive), it just went away -no more plate. Maybe they think the SDF approach mentioned by the OP may come back at some point, so they don't want to completely remove it from the system? -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane, USUA Ultralight Pilot Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#4
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An instrument approach is, in effect, an act of Congress. Although they do
it through obscure references to Part 97, each approach must be published in the Code of Federal Regulations and, as you might imagine, it literally takes an act of Congress to revoke one. Jepp and NACO probably have some kind of contractual obligation to publish all existing approaches. Bob Gardner "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you recognize a mistake when you make it again. -- F. P. Jones |
#5
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In a previous article, "Bob Gardner" said:
An instrument approach is, in effect, an act of Congress. Although they do it through obscure references to Part 97, each approach must be published in the Code of Federal Regulations and, as you might imagine, it literally takes an act of Congress to revoke one. Jepp and NACO probably have some kind of contractual obligation to publish all existing approaches. You'd think that it would be a small change of procedure and a huge improvement in safety if they would at least overprint the procedure with "NAVAID OTS" or something. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ To iterate is human; to recurse, is divine. |
#6
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A good example of why one should always check the FDC NOTAMS for this
kind of information. Having an approach chart does not mean the approach is authorized. Why the controlling facility (who should have been aware) issued the approach clearance is a reasonable question. On Sun, 27 May 2007 22:20:13 +0000 (UTC), (Paul Tomblin) wrote: I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? |
#7
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FDC NOTAMS are the vehicle to communicate changes to approach
procedures. If a pilot is unaware of an FDC NOTAM which applies to his destination chart, he has not done adequate preflight. On Sun, 27 May 2007 18:37:40 -0400, Roy Smith wrote: In article , (Paul Tomblin) wrote: I'm just reading IFR Refresher, and it has a report on an accident that happened after a King Air was cleared for an SDF approach at KSME. According to the article, at the time the A/FD and NTAP listed the SDF as "Out of Service (OTS) - Indefinitely", and had been for four years, but the plate was still being published with no mention that the SDF was OTS. Why the hell would they continue to publish an approach plate in a situation like that? There's probably less paperwork and red tape involved to just notam something OTS than to get it revoked. "We don't have to make sense, we're the FAA". |
#8
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In a previous article, said:
A good example of why one should always check the FDC NOTAMS for this kind of information. And the whole process of moving 56 day old NOTAMs off the normal NOTAM list onto that $115 publication that nobody subscribes to is just incredibly stupid. Keep in mind that this navaid had been OTS for 4 years at the time of the accident. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ I mean, if went 'round saying I was a perl hacker, just because some moistened bint lobbed a "Perl for Dummies" at me, they'd put me away! -- Randy the Random |
#9
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I don't think that either Jepp or NACO has the authority to do modify an
approach plate. Bob "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... In a previous article, "Bob Gardner" said: An instrument approach is, in effect, an act of Congress. Although they do it through obscure references to Part 97, each approach must be published in the Code of Federal Regulations and, as you might imagine, it literally takes an act of Congress to revoke one. Jepp and NACO probably have some kind of contractual obligation to publish all existing approaches. You'd think that it would be a small change of procedure and a huge improvement in safety if they would at least overprint the procedure with "NAVAID OTS" or something. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ To iterate is human; to recurse, is divine. |
#10
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I don't think that either Jepp or NACO has the authority to do modify an approach plate.
They don't have the authority to modify an approach =procedure=. However, they can chart the procedure any way they want. Overprinting the words "Probably OTS, check notams", while raising questions that probably should be raised, would be within their authority. Jose -- There are two kinds of people in the world. Those that just want to know what button to push, and those that want to know what happens when they push the button. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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