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#21
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![]() Richard Kaplan wrote: wrote in message ... Check the RNAV Runway 24 at KCRQ, then pass that one by us again. Could you be more specific? What are the interesting features of this approach and how does that relate to this discussion? I believe you said you could continue to VNAV minimums so long as you didn't violate any LNAV stepdown fixes. Note the huge difference in LNAV vs. VNAV minimums on that IAP and there are no LNAV stepdown fixes to use to stay out of harm's way. |
#22
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![]() "Richard Kaplan" wrote in message news:08e5297f8b04a12ba98b54fe2071e26e@TeraNews... "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... No. I am writing that Garmin is now going to have to play catch up. Then what did you mean when you said "WAAS alone could not add any new services to existing GPS"? The use of a data base and pressure altitude are being used to pump the probabilities for the UPS box. |
#23
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message ...
"Richard Kaplan" wrote in message news:6823bf21e87c61799d150096f329071b@TeraNews... | Garmin's website now says they are "committed" to providing WAAS GPS | approach capability for the 400/500 series by the "end of 2004." | | UPSAT's site states that their CNX-80 is WAAS approved now but I cannot find | an explicit statement that it supports WAAS approaches at this point. | UPS told us that the CNX-80 database needs an upgrade before you can do WAAS approaches and has promised that it has already been release and that we should get it soon. Howdy! 1. WAAS is turned on but only "approved operators with approved equipment" may do the LNAV/LPV/WAAS/GPS Precision Approaches. 2. The CNX80 is ONLY approved equipment for NON-PRECISION GPS Approaches. 3. The CNX80 is NOT approved for PRECISION GPS Approaches (RNAV/VNAV/etc) and will not be for several months to come. 4. GARMIN's 530/430 equipment is only approved for NON-PRECISION GPS Approaches. 5. GARMIN's 530/430 equipment may or may not beat UPSAT's CNX80 in the quest for PRECISION GPS Approach Approval. 6. IFR Enroute, Terminal, and Oceanic IFR-Approved GPS units with an IFR-Approved installation AND CURRENT database may be used as a substitute for DME in the U.S. (Consider that the rest of the world still thinks NDBs are a pretty neat idea and the U.S. DOD OWNS and OPERATES GPS. Of course the rest of the world still has their heads up their arses when it comes to GPS, they didn't think of it first, and a valid concern about the US military's ability to turn off GPS.) I don't think GARMIN has missed the boat at all. Their delay in implementing WAAS upgrades is deliberate to allow the FAA to turn on WAAS all over the country and not just the 16 Approaches that could be flown with GPS/WAAS equipment. WAAS and LAAS are not fully operational, and GARMIN wants to see which system will win, if not both, and GARMIN's upgrade will handle the appropriate system. This is why GARMIN is implementing Terrain and TAWS this year, and WAAS next year. At this time, terrain is a software upgrade, TAWS is a hardware upgrade, and that will probably change before GARMIN ships the units. GARMIN is planning for WAAS to be a software upgrade. The difference? Software upgrades can be done at a dealer. UPSAT's CNX80's WAAS-Enabled GPS is a bunch of marketing hype until such time that the FAA allows Precision GPS approaches. Aloft, a difference of 1' (WAAS) versus 3' (GPS) doesn't make a critical difference in avoiding terrain or other obstacles. Being 200' over the end of the runway, 1 foot versus 3 feet might make a critical difference, hence the extended wait for GPS Precision Approaches. The FAA's slowness in implementing WAAS approaches and approvals might be deliberate due to the number of airspace and altitude busts by pilots with the fancy GPS units on board. The FAA may be waiting for the pilot community to get themselves trained on these GPS units before certifying the system as safe for the general aviation pilots. Where is my information from? The technical standard orders for precision and non-precision GPS units, several days at the Aircraft Electronics Association Convention, digging through the pounds of manuals and installation manuals for the various units, and from the mouths of the engineers and techs themselves at GARMIN, UPSAT, and L3. Fly SAFE! Jedi Nein www.slantgolf.com (in progress) |
#24
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Slightly off topic, but interesting in this context:
The latest edition of the FAA's SatNav News contains a graphic of projections for various navaids through 2020. It shows the current number of VORs (1033) diminishing to about 500 beginning in 2010; however, the listing for VOR-DME/VORTAC shows an increase from 878 to more than 930. TACAN shows no change from 2002 through 2020. Long range NDBs are retained in Alaska and coastal. ILS Cat I and LOC approaches diminish from 1158 to about 546, while the number of Cat III ILSs increases slightly. GPS is strong throughout...WAAS comes up in 2003 and LAAS Cat 1 in 2005. The decision on the fate of Loran is still up in the air. Bob Gardner "Richard Kaplan" wrote in message news:6823bf21e87c61799d150096f329071b@TeraNews... Garmin's website now says they are "committed" to providing WAAS GPS approach capability for the 400/500 series by the "end of 2004." UPSAT's site states that their CNX-80 is WAAS approved now but I cannot find an explicit statement that it supports WAAS approaches at this point. Does anyone know for sure if the CNX-80 supports WAAS GPS approaches *now*? In any event, can Garmin really be that far behind the curve as to plan WAAS only fo rthe "end of 2004"? This seems very much atypical for Garmin and almost an embarrassment for them. -- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#25
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