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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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Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed
this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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I'm not sure what you mean by your comments Bob. Do you mean that they said
fly to your destination "AS PLANNED", what Brown says in his articles, or fly to the destination that you're enroute to and let down enroute and land? Don't know for sure, but I'm guessing you mean that the controllers were urging the later. I sure diagree with following that advice. Of course we're talking about NORDO in IMC, an extremely unlikely event, but worth, of course, the discussion. How any pilot could follow that advice is beyond me. Who here is willing to bet that the controller(s) is/are sterilizing the airspace and not expecting you to follow procedure? Who here is willing to bet they won't hit another aircraft? Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? At the hearing, who here thinks all those controllers that we hear about urging us to violate the regs in this unlikely occurrence are going to show up in defense of the pilot who violated a regulation and put an airliner at risk, at least in somebodys mind? In answer to Dave, in a general sense not using an IAP for any particular airport, I'd rely on the weather forcast I got on departure, updated weather if I had it, and pick an approach for the appropriate runway. If there's a holding pattern depicted for the rwy IAP, enter at the altitude you've chosen consistent with NORDO procedures and descend in that holding pattern to make good the time described for NORDO procedures in the AIM. (Pretty general here since I don't have an AIM in front of me). If there's no holding pattern depicted, I'd fly to the IAF at the altitude I had picked (see above) and set up a standard holding pattern and descent in that pattern to make good the time at the airport or the IAF. Will this inconveniece people? Maybe. But the alternative, again in this unlikely scenario, is potentially so unsafe that I wonder why anyone would even consider it. Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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Who here is willing to bet that a
supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? In an emergency, you are permitted to... in fact supposed to... violate the regs to the extent necessary to meet the emergency. It's your call, but I'd bet my ticket the FAA would back the pilot in that case. Jose -- You may not get what you pay for, but you sure as hell pay for what you get. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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![]() "Jose" wrote in message m... Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? In an emergency, you are permitted to... in fact supposed to... violate the regs to the extent necessary to meet the emergency. It's your call, but I'd bet my ticket the FAA would back the pilot in that case. Jose -- I agree with you Jose, but what is the emergency? Loss of a radio in IMC when there's a procedure to get you on the ground? I just don't see it and, although many cite controller opinions on this that violating the procedure is expected and condoned, I think it dangerous and foolhardy for anyone to do so. Until the procedure(s) is/are rescinded, I think its unlikely that you'd convince all your "judges" that you had an emergency situation because the procedure was inconvenient. As you say, it's your call although that call could, potentially (unlikely I agree), kill someone. Jim |
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I agree with you Jose, but what is the emergency? Loss of a radio in IMC
when there's a procedure to get you on the ground? Loss of radio IMC at the beginning of a four hour IFR flight from just south of DC to Islip on Long Island, which would take me NORDO through or around the ADIZ, the DC Class B, the Philadelphia class B, and the NY class B, when there's good weather to the southwest of me. I don't know why the radio failed, I'm cleared to 5000 (tops at 5500), and I don't know what else might be on the way to transistor heaven. So, do you turn right and climb another thousand feet, or do you drone into the wasp nests ahead on a clearance that is almost always changed six or seven times enroute? Sometimes is's safe, sometimes it's not. If the FAA lawyers were aboard, what would they want me to do? Jose -- You may not get what you pay for, but you sure as hell pay for what you get. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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I attend the controller's "Communicating for Safety" conference each year,
so I talk to a lot of controllers from around the country. They are unanimous in saying that their primary interest is in getting the NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible. I see Don Brown at these meetings, as well, and we have some interesting conversations. Don is not a pilot, as most of us know, and his "by the book" approach is not shared by all of his compatriots. If I were to lose comms in IFR I would fly airways to my destination, using MEAs all the way, and shoot an approach at the other end (that's a good argument for filing airways and then asking for "direct" on first contact with Center). Having flown jets in the flight levels, I would not follow the same procedure because of fuel considerations...I would stay high until a moderate descent rate would get me to an IAF at the appropriate altitude. However, every jet I have ever been in has had an air-ground telephone and I suspect it would be used if VHF comms were lost. Your contention that ATC might somehow forget to sterilize the airspace is puerile. If they don't apply the sterilization until after they have confirmed that comms have been lost, how could they forget? Bob Gardner "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... I'm not sure what you mean by your comments Bob. Do you mean that they said fly to your destination "AS PLANNED", what Brown says in his articles, or fly to the destination that you're enroute to and let down enroute and land? Don't know for sure, but I'm guessing you mean that the controllers were urging the later. I sure diagree with following that advice. Of course we're talking about NORDO in IMC, an extremely unlikely event, but worth, of course, the discussion. How any pilot could follow that advice is beyond me. Who here is willing to bet that the controller(s) is/are sterilizing the airspace and not expecting you to follow procedure? Who here is willing to bet they won't hit another aircraft? Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? At the hearing, who here thinks all those controllers that we hear about urging us to violate the regs in this unlikely occurrence are going to show up in defense of the pilot who violated a regulation and put an airliner at risk, at least in somebodys mind? In answer to Dave, in a general sense not using an IAP for any particular airport, I'd rely on the weather forcast I got on departure, updated weather if I had it, and pick an approach for the appropriate runway. If there's a holding pattern depicted for the rwy IAP, enter at the altitude you've chosen consistent with NORDO procedures and descend in that holding pattern to make good the time described for NORDO procedures in the AIM. (Pretty general here since I don't have an AIM in front of me). If there's no holding pattern depicted, I'd fly to the IAF at the altitude I had picked (see above) and set up a standard holding pattern and descent in that pattern to make good the time at the airport or the IAF. Will this inconveniece people? Maybe. But the alternative, again in this unlikely scenario, is potentially so unsafe that I wonder why anyone would even consider it. Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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Bob....Your first paragraph is maybe not puerile, but certainly nonsensical.
If the controllers at these annual meetings are unanimous, which I think is hyperbole merely to make your point, then how could Don disagree since, as you say, he is attending as a controller? You say his opinions are not shared by all his compatriots, but some do? Hmmmmm...where's the unanimity in that? I'm merely poking at you here Bob, no offense. I agree it's important to have a NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible, but that doesn't mean at any cost. I contend, the entire DoD flying community contends, and the official guidance of the FAA contends that ASAP doesn't mean at any cost disregarding established procedure. I don't see how a responsible pilot can ignore procedure when there is no emergency. It's bad judgment. I find your second paragraph about not all of his compatriots sharing Don's "by the book" approach to be disheartening and dangerous. It dismays me that we stress, as instructors, procedure tempered with judgment to our students as the way to safely fly aircraft and yet there's outright advocacy for disregarding procedure by some pilots and controllers when there's no emergency. To disregard procedure with no "good" reason to do so other than convenience is, to me, bad judgment on the pilots part because it endangers others lives. If your point about sterilized airspace is correct and there's no danger, fine, but then what do you teach pilots about other procedures? If a group of pilots and controllers, but not all of us, agree a procedure can be safely ignored, it's bogus, then those pilots can pick and choose when to ignore it based on their reading of the non-emergency scenario? If these controllers and pilots are so sure that this situation can be handled in another way, safely, then why don't some of them try to get things changed to reflect their vision of reality and practicality? Change the procedure. I support that. I have to disagree with your changing procedure because you're flying in the flight levels. I've flown up there since 1973 and I've always had the fuel to fly the planned route to my destination. None of the jets I flew had an air-ground phone (B-52, B-1B and B-727). Best regards, Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news ![]() I attend the controller's "Communicating for Safety" conference each year, so I talk to a lot of controllers from around the country. They are unanimous in saying that their primary interest is in getting the NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible. I see Don Brown at these meetings, as well, and we have some interesting conversations. Don is not a pilot, as most of us know, and his "by the book" approach is not shared by all of his compatriots. If I were to lose comms in IFR I would fly airways to my destination, using MEAs all the way, and shoot an approach at the other end (that's a good argument for filing airways and then asking for "direct" on first contact with Center). Having flown jets in the flight levels, I would not follow the same procedure because of fuel considerations...I would stay high until a moderate descent rate would get me to an IAF at the appropriate altitude. However, every jet I have ever been in has had an air-ground telephone and I suspect it would be used if VHF comms were lost. Your contention that ATC might somehow forget to sterilize the airspace is puerile. If they don't apply the sterilization until after they have confirmed that comms have been lost, how could they forget? Bob Gardner "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... I'm not sure what you mean by your comments Bob. Do you mean that they said fly to your destination "AS PLANNED", what Brown says in his articles, or fly to the destination that you're enroute to and let down enroute and land? Don't know for sure, but I'm guessing you mean that the controllers were urging the later. I sure diagree with following that advice. Of course we're talking about NORDO in IMC, an extremely unlikely event, but worth, of course, the discussion. How any pilot could follow that advice is beyond me. Who here is willing to bet that the controller(s) is/are sterilizing the airspace and not expecting you to follow procedure? Who here is willing to bet they won't hit another aircraft? Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? At the hearing, who here thinks all those controllers that we hear about urging us to violate the regs in this unlikely occurrence are going to show up in defense of the pilot who violated a regulation and put an airliner at risk, at least in somebodys mind? In answer to Dave, in a general sense not using an IAP for any particular airport, I'd rely on the weather forcast I got on departure, updated weather if I had it, and pick an approach for the appropriate runway. If there's a holding pattern depicted for the rwy IAP, enter at the altitude you've chosen consistent with NORDO procedures and descend in that holding pattern to make good the time described for NORDO procedures in the AIM. (Pretty general here since I don't have an AIM in front of me). If there's no holding pattern depicted, I'd fly to the IAF at the altitude I had picked (see above) and set up a standard holding pattern and descent in that pattern to make good the time at the airport or the IAF. Will this inconveniece people? Maybe. But the alternative, again in this unlikely scenario, is potentially so unsafe that I wonder why anyone would even consider it. Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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I didn't mean to imply that we had a show of hands at the controller's
conference. Many controllers have confided to me in e-mails and private conversations that while no one can say that Don is wrong in his by-the-book approach (how could he be?), there are work-arounds that make things easier for them. I can't cite chapter and verse, but the FAA considers lost comms to be an emergency, and no one second-guesses a pilot who says s/he has/had an emergency. Re flying in the flight levels, how did fuel enter into the discussion? I readily acknowledge that military aircraft do not have inflight phones....my experience is with corporate jets and turboprops. Bob Gardner "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... Bob....Your first paragraph is maybe not puerile, but certainly nonsensical. If the controllers at these annual meetings are unanimous, which I think is hyperbole merely to make your point, then how could Don disagree since, as you say, he is attending as a controller? You say his opinions are not shared by all his compatriots, but some do? Hmmmmm...where's the unanimity in that? I'm merely poking at you here Bob, no offense. I agree it's important to have a NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible, but that doesn't mean at any cost. I contend, the entire DoD flying community contends, and the official guidance of the FAA contends that ASAP doesn't mean at any cost disregarding established procedure. I don't see how a responsible pilot can ignore procedure when there is no emergency. It's bad judgment. I find your second paragraph about not all of his compatriots sharing Don's "by the book" approach to be disheartening and dangerous. It dismays me that we stress, as instructors, procedure tempered with judgment to our students as the way to safely fly aircraft and yet there's outright advocacy for disregarding procedure by some pilots and controllers when there's no emergency. To disregard procedure with no "good" reason to do so other than convenience is, to me, bad judgment on the pilots part because it endangers others lives. If your point about sterilized airspace is correct and there's no danger, fine, but then what do you teach pilots about other procedures? If a group of pilots and controllers, but not all of us, agree a procedure can be safely ignored, it's bogus, then those pilots can pick and choose when to ignore it based on their reading of the non-emergency scenario? If these controllers and pilots are so sure that this situation can be handled in another way, safely, then why don't some of them try to get things changed to reflect their vision of reality and practicality? Change the procedure. I support that. I have to disagree with your changing procedure because you're flying in the flight levels. I've flown up there since 1973 and I've always had the fuel to fly the planned route to my destination. None of the jets I flew had an air-ground phone (B-52, B-1B and B-727). Best regards, Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news ![]() I attend the controller's "Communicating for Safety" conference each year, so I talk to a lot of controllers from around the country. They are unanimous in saying that their primary interest is in getting the NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible. I see Don Brown at these meetings, as well, and we have some interesting conversations. Don is not a pilot, as most of us know, and his "by the book" approach is not shared by all of his compatriots. If I were to lose comms in IFR I would fly airways to my destination, using MEAs all the way, and shoot an approach at the other end (that's a good argument for filing airways and then asking for "direct" on first contact with Center). Having flown jets in the flight levels, I would not follow the same procedure because of fuel considerations...I would stay high until a moderate descent rate would get me to an IAF at the appropriate altitude. However, every jet I have ever been in has had an air-ground telephone and I suspect it would be used if VHF comms were lost. Your contention that ATC might somehow forget to sterilize the airspace is puerile. If they don't apply the sterilization until after they have confirmed that comms have been lost, how could they forget? Bob Gardner "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... I'm not sure what you mean by your comments Bob. Do you mean that they said fly to your destination "AS PLANNED", what Brown says in his articles, or fly to the destination that you're enroute to and let down enroute and land? Don't know for sure, but I'm guessing you mean that the controllers were urging the later. I sure diagree with following that advice. Of course we're talking about NORDO in IMC, an extremely unlikely event, but worth, of course, the discussion. How any pilot could follow that advice is beyond me. Who here is willing to bet that the controller(s) is/are sterilizing the airspace and not expecting you to follow procedure? Who here is willing to bet they won't hit another aircraft? Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? At the hearing, who here thinks all those controllers that we hear about urging us to violate the regs in this unlikely occurrence are going to show up in defense of the pilot who violated a regulation and put an airliner at risk, at least in somebodys mind? In answer to Dave, in a general sense not using an IAP for any particular airport, I'd rely on the weather forcast I got on departure, updated weather if I had it, and pick an approach for the appropriate runway. If there's a holding pattern depicted for the rwy IAP, enter at the altitude you've chosen consistent with NORDO procedures and descend in that holding pattern to make good the time described for NORDO procedures in the AIM. (Pretty general here since I don't have an AIM in front of me). If there's no holding pattern depicted, I'd fly to the IAF at the altitude I had picked (see above) and set up a standard holding pattern and descent in that pattern to make good the time at the airport or the IAF. Will this inconveniece people? Maybe. But the alternative, again in this unlikely scenario, is potentially so unsafe that I wonder why anyone would even consider it. Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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My mind isn't working too well today. You and I both know that when you do
fuel planning for a jet flight you base the pph on flying at altitude, and if for some reason such as 91.185 you descend to the MEA for a flight segment, your fuel planning would go out the window. Bob "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... Bob....Your first paragraph is maybe not puerile, but certainly nonsensical. If the controllers at these annual meetings are unanimous, which I think is hyperbole merely to make your point, then how could Don disagree since, as you say, he is attending as a controller? You say his opinions are not shared by all his compatriots, but some do? Hmmmmm...where's the unanimity in that? I'm merely poking at you here Bob, no offense. I agree it's important to have a NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible, but that doesn't mean at any cost. I contend, the entire DoD flying community contends, and the official guidance of the FAA contends that ASAP doesn't mean at any cost disregarding established procedure. I don't see how a responsible pilot can ignore procedure when there is no emergency. It's bad judgment. I find your second paragraph about not all of his compatriots sharing Don's "by the book" approach to be disheartening and dangerous. It dismays me that we stress, as instructors, procedure tempered with judgment to our students as the way to safely fly aircraft and yet there's outright advocacy for disregarding procedure by some pilots and controllers when there's no emergency. To disregard procedure with no "good" reason to do so other than convenience is, to me, bad judgment on the pilots part because it endangers others lives. If your point about sterilized airspace is correct and there's no danger, fine, but then what do you teach pilots about other procedures? If a group of pilots and controllers, but not all of us, agree a procedure can be safely ignored, it's bogus, then those pilots can pick and choose when to ignore it based on their reading of the non-emergency scenario? If these controllers and pilots are so sure that this situation can be handled in another way, safely, then why don't some of them try to get things changed to reflect their vision of reality and practicality? Change the procedure. I support that. I have to disagree with your changing procedure because you're flying in the flight levels. I've flown up there since 1973 and I've always had the fuel to fly the planned route to my destination. None of the jets I flew had an air-ground phone (B-52, B-1B and B-727). Best regards, Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news ![]() I attend the controller's "Communicating for Safety" conference each year, so I talk to a lot of controllers from around the country. They are unanimous in saying that their primary interest is in getting the NORDO aircraft on the ground as soon as possible. I see Don Brown at these meetings, as well, and we have some interesting conversations. Don is not a pilot, as most of us know, and his "by the book" approach is not shared by all of his compatriots. If I were to lose comms in IFR I would fly airways to my destination, using MEAs all the way, and shoot an approach at the other end (that's a good argument for filing airways and then asking for "direct" on first contact with Center). Having flown jets in the flight levels, I would not follow the same procedure because of fuel considerations...I would stay high until a moderate descent rate would get me to an IAF at the appropriate altitude. However, every jet I have ever been in has had an air-ground telephone and I suspect it would be used if VHF comms were lost. Your contention that ATC might somehow forget to sterilize the airspace is puerile. If they don't apply the sterilization until after they have confirmed that comms have been lost, how could they forget? Bob Gardner "Jim Baker" wrote in message ... I'm not sure what you mean by your comments Bob. Do you mean that they said fly to your destination "AS PLANNED", what Brown says in his articles, or fly to the destination that you're enroute to and let down enroute and land? Don't know for sure, but I'm guessing you mean that the controllers were urging the later. I sure diagree with following that advice. Of course we're talking about NORDO in IMC, an extremely unlikely event, but worth, of course, the discussion. How any pilot could follow that advice is beyond me. Who here is willing to bet that the controller(s) is/are sterilizing the airspace and not expecting you to follow procedure? Who here is willing to bet they won't hit another aircraft? Who here is willing to bet that a supervisor or a grouchy controller isn't going to file against them for violating the regs? At the hearing, who here thinks all those controllers that we hear about urging us to violate the regs in this unlikely occurrence are going to show up in defense of the pilot who violated a regulation and put an airliner at risk, at least in somebodys mind? In answer to Dave, in a general sense not using an IAP for any particular airport, I'd rely on the weather forcast I got on departure, updated weather if I had it, and pick an approach for the appropriate runway. If there's a holding pattern depicted for the rwy IAP, enter at the altitude you've chosen consistent with NORDO procedures and descend in that holding pattern to make good the time described for NORDO procedures in the AIM. (Pretty general here since I don't have an AIM in front of me). If there's no holding pattern depicted, I'd fly to the IAF at the altitude I had picked (see above) and set up a standard holding pattern and descent in that pattern to make good the time at the airport or the IAF. Will this inconveniece people? Maybe. But the alternative, again in this unlikely scenario, is potentially so unsafe that I wonder why anyone would even consider it. Jim "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... Conventional wisdom, according to every controller I have ever discussed this with, is to forget about the regs, fly to the destination as planned and shoot an approach. Their reasoning is that once you are identified as NORDO, either by transponder or by failing to communicate, they will sterilize the airspace around the destination until you are on the ground. They do not want to keep other planes hanging while you comply with the regs. You will not find this in writing in any official pub. Bob Gardner wrote in message oups.com... 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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