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#1
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Some approaches have a note, "Procedure NA at night except by prior
arrangement for runway lights". Let's say I make this prior arrangement (presumably by talking to the airport manager and having him leave the lights on for me), how do I deal with ATC? When I ask for the approach, is the controller going to ask me if I have made "prior arrangement" for the lights? Is my say-so good enough for him, or does he need to get some official notice from the airport manager saying it's OK to let him run the approach? |
#2
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Roy Smith wrote in
: Some approaches have a note, "Procedure NA at night except by prior arrangement for runway lights". Let's say I make this prior arrangement (presumably by talking to the airport manager and having him leave the lights on for me), how do I deal with ATC? When I ask for the approach, is the controller going to ask me if I have made "prior arrangement" for the lights? Is my say-so good enough for him, or does he need to get some official notice from the airport manager saying it's OK to let him run the approach? IME, ATC assumes that if you ask for something, it's legal for you to do it. They don't have the time to investigate that kind of thing. -- Regards, Stan "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." B. Franklin |
#3
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ATC could care less if you have lights.
KG "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... Some approaches have a note, "Procedure NA at night except by prior arrangement for runway lights". Let's say I make this prior arrangement (presumably by talking to the airport manager and having him leave the lights on for me), how do I deal with ATC? When I ask for the approach, is the controller going to ask me if I have made "prior arrangement" for the lights? Is my say-so good enough for him, or does he need to get some official notice from the airport manager saying it's OK to let him run the approach? |
#4
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Not always. I was supprised when I ask for a "Pop Up" from Toledo, OH
the other day. I ask for a GPS approach and he ask if the plane was IFR GPS equiped and current. I guess because there are so many VFR GPSs. I said yes and that was that. Chuck |
#5
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In article .com,
"Chuck" wrote: Not always. I was supprised when I ask for a "Pop Up" from Toledo, OH the other day. I ask for a GPS approach and he ask if the plane was IFR GPS equiped and current. I guess because there are so many VFR GPSs. I said yes and that was that. This caught my eye the other day: !FDC 5/2548 FWN FI/T SUSSEX, SUSSEX, NJ. VOR OR GPS-A AMDT 5B... PROCEDURE NA EXCEPT FOR IFR GPS-EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT. I struck me as strange that they felt the need to explicitly state "IFR GPS" for an approach procedure. And, even then, it's badly worded, since there are plenty of IFR GPS units which are not approved for approaches. |
#6
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![]() Roy Smith wrote: In article .com, "Chuck" wrote: Not always. I was supprised when I ask for a "Pop Up" from Toledo, OH the other day. I ask for a GPS approach and he ask if the plane was IFR GPS equiped and current. I guess because there are so many VFR GPSs. I said yes and that was that. This caught my eye the other day: !FDC 5/2548 FWN FI/T SUSSEX, SUSSEX, NJ. VOR OR GPS-A AMDT 5B... PROCEDURE NA EXCEPT FOR IFR GPS-EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT. I struck me as strange that they felt the need to explicitly state "IFR GPS" for an approach procedure. And, even then, it's badly worded, since there are plenty of IFR GPS units which are not approved for approaches. Part of the requirement is to be able to retrieve the approach from the database. You can't do that with an IFR GPS unit that is not approved for approaches. So, why would the FAA need to state the obvious? As to their stating "IFR GPS-EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT" if they simply said "GPS-EQUPPED AIRCRAFT" some airport jailhouse lawyer would point to it as implicit authorization to fly the approach with a Garmin hand-held. |
#7
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Roy Smith wrote in message ...
In article .com, "Chuck" wrote: Not always. I was supprised when I ask for a "Pop Up" from Toledo, OH the other day. I ask for a GPS approach and he ask if the plane was IFR GPS equiped and current. I guess because there are so many VFR GPSs. I said yes and that was that. This caught my eye the other day: !FDC 5/2548 FWN FI/T SUSSEX, SUSSEX, NJ. VOR OR GPS-A AMDT 5B... PROCEDURE NA EXCEPT FOR IFR GPS-EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT. I struck me as strange that they felt the need to explicitly state "IFR GPS" for an approach procedure. And, even then, it's badly worded, since there are plenty of IFR GPS units which are not approved for approaches. I think what they are saying is that the VOR is not usable for the approach. You can't even shoot the VOR and use the VFR GPS as a backup. -Robert |
#8
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![]() Roy Smith wrote: Some approaches have a note, "Procedure NA at night except by prior arrangement for runway lights". Let's say I make this prior arrangement (presumably by talking to the airport manager and having him leave the lights on for me), how do I deal with ATC? When I ask for the approach, is the controller going to ask me if I have made "prior arrangement" for the lights? Is my say-so good enough for him, or does he need to get some official notice from the airport manager saying it's OK to let him run the approach? As has been said here many times, ATC is neither a regulatory nor legal interpretation entity. If he even asks, which is problematical, you tell him it's been taken care of. The only time ATC gets involved with authorizations for an approach is to deny its use at night when it is not authorized at night. Or, to deny its use when the airport is officially known to his ATC facility to be closed. Or, to temporarily deny its use when there is a traffic conflict. Or, to deny its use when the basic facility for ground-based-navigation is NOTAMed OTS. And, he is not supposed to clear you for an approach that requires equipment that you apparently do not have, as indicated by your equipment suffix. That's about it. In the final analysis the regulatory requirements, authorizations and limitations of the Part 97 IAP are between you and the regulators at the FAA. Neither controllers nor ATC facilities are regulators or regulatory functions of the FAA. |
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