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I am new to this group, because I recently went through an IFR course.
I do have a question. There is an airport close to here called Orlando Sanford (SFB). It has two approaches called NDB-B and NDB-C. Both are similar but they approach the airport from west and east, respectively. Let's consider NDB-B. The approach is on 095 to the NDB, which is located just north (very close) to 9L. The airport has runways 9L, 9C and 9R from the west, plus a north-south runway. I asked my DE why this approach was a circling to land only instead of a straight in approach, since the approach course and runway 9L are well within 30° of each other. It took him a while to say that the reason is that the approach doesn't cross the extended centerline of runway 9L and therefore, it is a circling to land. Now this sounds great, but I have not been able to find any reference to this in the literature. I can only find references to the "within 30°" to define a straight in approach, but I can't find that it also has to cross the runway centerline. Can anyone help me out on this? Thanks. Simon Ramirez Oviedo, FL |
#2
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but I can't find that it also has to cross the runway centerline.
613. FINAL APPROACH SEGMENT. The final approach begins where the PT intersects the FAC. a. Alignment. The alignment of the FAC with the runway centerline determines whether a straight-in or circling-only approach may be established. (1) Straight-In. The angle of convergence of the FAC and the extended runway centerline shall not exceed 30°. The FAC should be aligned to intersect the extended runway centerline 3000 feet outward from the runway threshold. When an operational advantage can be achieved, this point of intersection may be established at any point between the runway threshold and a point 5200 feet outward from the runway threshold. Also, where an operational advantage can be achieved a FAC which does not intersect the runway centerline, or intersects it at a distance greater than 5200 feet from the threshold, may be established provided that such course lies within 500 feet, laterally, of the extended runway centerline at a point 3000 feet outward from the runway threshold. Straight-in category C, D, and E minimums are not authorized when the final approach course intersects the extended runway centerline at an angle greater than 15° and a distance less than 3,000 feet (see Figure 55). |
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On Thu, 10 Jul 2003 16:28:51 -0500, Greg Esres wrote:
but I can't find that it also has to cross the runway centerline. 613. FINAL APPROACH SEGMENT. The final approach begins where the PT intersects the FAC. a. Alignment. The alignment of the FAC with the runway centerline determines whether a straight-in or circling-only approach may be established. (1) Straight-In. The angle of convergence of the FAC and the extended runway centerline shall not exceed 30°. The FAC should be aligned to intersect the extended runway centerline 3000 feet outward from the runway threshold. When an operational advantage can be achieved, this point of intersection may be established at any point between the runway threshold and a point 5200 feet outward from the runway threshold. Also, where an operational advantage can be achieved a FAC which does not intersect the runway centerline, or intersects it at a distance greater than 5200 feet from the threshold, may be established provided that such course lies within 500 feet, laterally, of the extended runway centerline at a point 3000 feet outward from the runway threshold. Straight-in category C, D, and E minimums are not authorized when the final approach course intersects the extended runway centerline at an angle greater than 15° and a distance less than 3,000 feet (see Figure 55). Just a very small nit -- doesn't 713 apply here since the procedure has a FAF? This does not change the gist of the reply, though. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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Just a very small nit -- doesn't 713 apply here since the procedure
has a FAF? This does not change the gist of the reply, though. I couldn't find the chart on my slightly outdated JeppView disk, so I couldn't look at the approach. I know the poster said the NDB was slightly to the North, but it still *might* have been treated as an on-airport NDB. But, I guess from your post, it wasn't. :-) |
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On Fri, 11 Jul 2003 10:04:33 -0500, Greg Esres wrote:
Just a very small nit -- doesn't 713 apply here since the procedure has a FAF? This does not change the gist of the reply, though. I couldn't find the chart on my slightly outdated JeppView disk, so I couldn't look at the approach. I know the poster said the NDB was slightly to the North, but it still *might* have been treated as an on-airport NDB. But, I guess from your post, it wasn't. :-) It IS an on-airport NDB, but the procedure has an FAF. My outdated (1993) copy of TERPS indicates that Chapter 6 is for NDB Procedures, ON-Airport Facility NO FAF. Chapter 7 is for NDB Procedures with an FAF. And in Chapter 7 they do discuss differences between on and off airport facilities. Perhaps more recent TERPS have changed this? Let me check the web ... The chapter headings seem similar to above in Change 19 dtd May 2002. So I would guess the reference should be Chapter 7, for an NDB with an FAF (location could be off or on airport). Best, --ron Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#6
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"Greg Esres" wrote in message
news ![]() Just a very small nit -- doesn't 713 apply here since the procedure has a FAF? This does not change the gist of the reply, though. I couldn't find the chart on my slightly outdated JeppView disk, so I couldn't look at the approach. I know the poster said the NDB was slightly to the North, but it still *might* have been treated as an on-airport NDB. But, I guess from your post, it wasn't. :-) Greg, If you or anyone doesn't have the approach plates to analyze an approach plates, one can find them at the following website: http://www.myairplane.com Click on NOAA Approach Plates to go find the specific approach plate. Simon Ramirez Oviedo, FL USA |
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On Thu, 10 Jul 2003 12:37:45 GMT, "S. Ramirez" wrote:
Now this sounds great, but I have not been able to find any reference to this in the literature. I can only find references to the "within 30°" to define a straight in approach, but I can't find that it also has to cross the runway centerline. Can anyone help me out on this? Well, as I read TERPS, it doesn't necessarily have to cross the extended centerline, but where it does not, the course must be within 500' of the extended centerline at a point 3000' outward from the runway threshold. My crude measurements indicate the course is parallel but the NDB is located about 1150 ft from the centerline of Rwy 9/27, so it violates that requirement. The reference is TERPS 713.a.(2)(a) Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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