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#11
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On 9/7/04 4:02 PM, Brien K. Meehan wrote the following:
Mitty wrote: Doesn't seem like the MAP is that important. On an instrument approach, it's the most important thing in the world. So what if you are a bit early or late when you decide you can't see where you're going? You'd better study this a bit, because if you manage to get through your IFR checkride without busting it a bit, this attitude may soon make you dead a bit. I don't want to turn this into a flame war, but I'll take the bait he How (calculator, flight computer, mentally, etc.) and how precisely, during an approach, do you calculate your time to the MAP based on your ground speed crossing the FAF? Finally, to you, what is an acceptable "bit?" My checkride went fine, thanks. |
#12
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Mitty wrote:
How (calculator, flight computer, mentally, etc.) and how precisely, during an approach, do you calculate your time to the MAP based on your ground speed crossing the FAF? Finally, to you, what is an acceptable "bit?" A perfectly reasonable question. Lacking any better instrumentation (DME, or GPS), here's what I do: 1) Estimate the surface wind based on the best information you've got (which usually means ATIS or AWOS). 2) Add some random fudge factor to account for the fact that the winds at 500 - 2000 AGL (where you're going to be flying the approach) will tend to be a bit stronger than on the surface. 3) If it's not a direct head or tail wind, take a WAG at the head/tailwind component. 4) Add this to the indicated airspeed you plan on flying the approach at (at the speeds and altitudes you usually use for approaches, IAS is close enough to TAS that you shouldn't worry about the difference). 5) You now have a reasonable estimate of your groundspeed. If you're trying to refine this estimate to anything closer than the nearest 10 kts, you're fooling yourself. 6) Now, look at the FAF-to-MAP timing table and do a rough interpolation between the listed entries. If you spend more than about 30 seconds on the whole process, you're working too hard. Without a reliable way to measure GS, the best you can do is a reasonable guess, so don't knock yourself out trying to do anything fancier. With a handheld GPS, you're be insane not to take advantage of the information it gives you. If the MAP itself is not in the database, set it navigating to the ARP, or the FAF, or the last stepdown fix, or whatever makes the most sense for that approach. Start your watch to be legal, but use your GPS to be safe. |
#13
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A buddy of mine does this. Drives me nuts. He'll sit and screw with
the throttle to get 90 knots ground speed. I want to reach over there and smack him upside the head. He makes himself so busy trying to fly a certain groundspeed and he can't see that. does your friend fly a groundspeed or fly the plane? I know the plane flies through the air and doesn't know which way the ground goes (up/down/left/right/forward/backward). If he is doing an circle-to-land approach say in a 152 with 50 knot tail wind, does he really have a IAS of 20 knots (or whatever a 152 does an approach at). If so, his ground speed might be zero knots when he stalls. Gerald |
#14
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On 9/7/04 6:21 PM, Roy Smith wrote the following:
Mitty wrote: How (calculator, flight computer, mentally, etc.) and how precisely, during an approach, do you calculate your time to the MAP based on your ground speed crossing the FAF? Finally, to you, what is an acceptable "bit?" A perfectly reasonable question. Lacking any better instrumentation (DME, or GPS), here's what I do: 1) Estimate the surface wind based on the best information you've got (which usually means ATIS or AWOS). 2) Add some random fudge factor to account for the fact that the winds at 500 - 2000 AGL (where you're going to be flying the approach) will tend to be a bit stronger than on the surface. 3) If it's not a direct head or tail wind, take a WAG at the head/tailwind component. 4) Add this to the indicated airspeed you plan on flying the approach at (at the speeds and altitudes you usually use for approaches, IAS is close enough to TAS that you shouldn't worry about the difference). 5) You now have a reasonable estimate of your groundspeed. If you're trying to refine this estimate to anything closer than the nearest 10 kts, you're fooling yourself. 6) Now, look at the FAF-to-MAP timing table and do a rough interpolation between the listed entries. If you spend more than about 30 seconds on the whole process, you're working too hard. Without a reliable way to measure GS, the best you can do is a reasonable guess, so don't knock yourself out trying to do anything fancier. OK, that's basically what I do too and the consequent errors are what I meant by the "a bit" comment that led to Meehan's smart-ass shot. "A bit" is maybe a 10-15% error on the time sans. I have no interest in studying the TERPS design rules but I gotta believe that they leave us plenty safe with that size error. With a handheld GPS, you're be insane not to take advantage of the information it gives you. If the MAP itself is not in the database, set it navigating to the ARP, or the FAF, or the last stepdown fix, or whatever makes the most sense for that approach. Start your watch to be legal, but use your GPS to be safe. No argument. But the original poster's idea sounded like head-down during an approach managing airspeed as it gets updated on a GPS -- that idea still scares me. I'm not smart enough to fly an approach while trying to do that, too. & I think it's unnecessary. |
#15
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"Howard Nelson" wrote in message . com...
I really, really, really would recommend flying an airspeed under all circumstances. Ditto. Planes fly airspeed, not groundspeed. I was taught to fly standard configurations of pitch, power, and trim. These should produce known airspeeds which set the plane up well for the specific phase of flight. Do you use the distance to the airport to determine/verify the MAP, even though the time may not have expired? Legally your IFR approved clock for timed approaches and NDB for NDB approaches are what you WILL use. Rationally if my clock or NDB disagreed with my GPS and I had to make a choice I would trust the GPS. The conservative choice would be to listen to the first box that cries "miss." Let's say the wind shifts and your groundspeed changes, the handheld says you're there. Might be good to miss it. If OTOH the clock says you're there and the GPS doesn't, you're not going to increase your risks by missing on that basis. I can understand the FAA wanting to avoid a free for all by regulating GPS usage so carefully. But each pilot, if faced with conflicting data, needs to decide which technology they trust their life to. The best way to do that is lots of practice under VFR checking clock vs. GPS, NDB vs. GPS, VOR vs. GPS, Localizer vs. GPS and make up your own mind. I use handheld GPS and panel Loran to cross-check everything else in my non GPS-equipped C-172. Like you say, there's no way the FAA will ever allow handheld GPS as an official navigational device for IFR, but they've also made a wise decision to not prevent it from being used anyway. A Decent handheld GPS and COM radio give a pilot a fighting chance to get down through the clouds in a total electrical failure, which is one of the emergencies I worry about most in a middle-aged plane like mine. (NB- I have a Precise Flight standby vacuum already) Also if you are not a renter you might consider spending 15-20K for an IFR certified GPS linked to your autopilot. You could probably put a good used box in for a lot less, though perhaps not linked to the A/P. 6K range for a used King/Apollo unit + install/certification is the estimate I've seen from multiple sources for a 172. |
#16
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Mitty wrote:
No argument. But the original poster's idea sounded like head-down during an approach managing airspeed as it gets updated on a GPS -- that idea still scares me. And it should. Fly whatever airspeed you're used to flying non-precision approaches at (90 KIAS is typical for common trainer types). The instrument to watch for managing airspeed is the ASI. Your groundspeed is whatever it works out to be. |
#17
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#18
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Do you use the throttle to increase/decrease power to match the
ground speed to the approach speed table so the time is correct to the MAP? I find this concept astonishing. Surely very, very few CFII's are teaching this? I have run into one or two. You use the time appropriate to the ground speed you have, when flying an appropriate indicated airspeed. |
#19
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Newps wrote in message ...
john smith wrote: For those of you using handheld GPS's when you fly IFR: Do you use the throttle to increase/decrease power to match the ground speed to the approach speed table so the time is correct to the MAP? A buddy of mine does this. Drives me nuts. He'll sit and screw with the throttle to get 90 knots ground speed. *** Even with a brisk tailwind? - Jerry Kaidor ( ) |
#20
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You could probably put a good used box in for a lot less, though
perhaps not linked to the A/P. 6K range for a used King/Apollo unit + install/certification is the estimate I've seen from multiple sources for a 172. Yep. It's that install/linking/cert that runs the price up. Other than a 430/530 box the labor may well equal the price of the unit. Howard --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.754 / Virus Database: 504 - Release Date: 9/6/2004 |
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