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#21
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![]() Dave Butler wrote: There's no need to clear the discontinuity. Just select EWTOF from the flight plan and go direct. snip Ok, again after more fiddling, you are correct. I was able to do that just now, although I swear I couldn't make it happen a couple of hours ago. It doesn't get rid of the discontinuity that is automatically inserted, but it does bypass it! Interestingly enough, I checked out the 530 behavior and it doesn't add the discontinuity. Problem solved. I guess. To echo comments that Dave J. made, I think the interfaces to these things suck! I'm also in my early 30's, used to make my living in high tech, and am fairly computer savvy. I am amazed at how poor the interface design is. I'm just happy that I grew up (not matured!) with exposure to computers. Trying to help my sexagenarian uncle wrap his brain around the 530/STEC/GPSS system in his Twin Commanche seems like a large task! He's back to flying from taking a 20 year layoff and the flying is the easy part. The automation/avionics are more difficult by a long shot, but he's doing pretty good thus far. Cheers, --Chris |
#22
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Peter wrote:
"Dave J" wrote Aviation used to represent the cutting edge in human factors research. What happened? I think that anybody with more than half a brain departed the GA avionics business at least 20 years ago. If you were seriously smart, would you work for a company that makes stuff using 1980s technology (colour LCDs aside) and brings out a new product once every 10 years? No company that does that will retain good people. To top it, they blame it on certification; it doesn't take 10 years to certify a product... especially if the company is already loaded with competent paper-pushers. The manner in which a GPS approach is flown with an IFR GPS should be far simpler. Avionics for GA is a tough business to begin with. You've got a very limited market to begin with: only a few thousand new planes per year on a good year, with only a chance that the manufacturer will select your gear, and a retrofit market that isn't all that much bigger. What is it about 200,000 aircraft total. Of those, a few percent will upgrade their avionics in a given year. Say by some miracle, you catch 20% of the market, that's still only 40000 units and once you sell those units, those aircraft won't be upgrading again for probably at least 10 years. that means, only a couple thousand units per year sales. It is hard to spread out the production and design costs enough to make the unit affordable enough for folks to buy it and yet profitable enough for the business to break even or (gasp) make a profit. That, folks is the real problem. Fixing it requires either a lot more people buying airplanes (don't hold your breath for that), or having the avionics boxes have some other higher volume market that can share much of the development (eg. boating and automotive GPS supports our aviation GPS by using a common platform). |
#23
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![]() -----Original Message----- From: Ray Andraka ] Posted At: Saturday, January 20, 2007 10:47 PM Posted To: rec.aviation.ifr Conversation: Commencing a GPS approach from a fix other than the FAF Subject: Commencing a GPS approach from a fix other than the FAF .... Avionics for GA is a tough business to begin with. You've got a very limited market to begin with: only a few thousand new planes per year on a good year, with only a chance that the manufacturer will select your gear, and a retrofit market that isn't all that much bigger. What is it about 200,000 aircraft total. Of those, a few percent will upgrade their avionics in a given year. Say by some miracle, you catch 20% of the market, that's still only 40000 units and once you sell those units, those aircraft won't be upgrading again for probably at least 10 years. that means, only a couple thousand units per year sales. It is hard to spread out the production and design costs enough to make the unit affordable enough for folks to buy it and yet profitable enough for the business to break even or (gasp) make a profit. That, folks is the real problem. Fixing it requires either a lot more people buying airplanes (don't hold your breath for that), or having the avionics boxes have some other higher volume market that can share much of the development (eg. boating and automotive GPS supports our aviation GPS by using a common platform). Maybe the solution would be to design a system that meets not only GA purposes but also 121 needs. I'm willing to be the increase in volume could more than offset the delta in engineering costs. After all, we work in the same system with usually the same minimums. If the supporting infrastructure (electric bus, rack space, etc) could be made similar there should be an economy of scale. Even if Garmin was to make remote control/display an option so the equipment could be mounted in an avionics bay, that additional engineering would probably be justified by the increased volume for a single design. |
#24
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![]() I hear all this about how avionics is a tough business, and I get it -- and yet that explanation is not completely satisfying. As others have pointed out, there are business with lower margins and smaller markets that seem to get by. The reason I think about certification is that the non-certified area of avionics seems to be quite healthy (or is at least not completely moribund.) Look at the handheld GPS market, the for-kit primary nav stuff (blue mountain, dynan, etc), EFBs, TCAS-like devices, headsets, etc.) There is some real competition going on here and some of these markets are way smaller than that for panel-mount GPS units. -- dave j |
#25
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Roy Smith wrote:
It ATC is allowed to send you direct to an IF, then the distinction between IF and IAF has, for all practical matters, been eliminated. If that's the case, then the databases and/or software needs to be updated to have the IFs show up in the menu. It will take quite a few years for the FAA to identify all the IFs. Direct-to-the IF is not an "if" for RNAV IAPs. ;-) It's been in the AIM and 7110.65 for about a year now. |
#26
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Peter wrote:
If you were seriously smart, would you work for a company that makes stuff using 1980s technology (colour LCDs aside) and brings out a new product once every 10 years? No company that does that will retain good people. To top it, they blame it on certification; it doesn't take 10 years to certify a product... especially if the company is already loaded with competent paper-pushers. In this case certification standards and obstacle clearance protected airspace are pretty much married to each other. |
#27
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![]() "Sam Spade" wrote in message ... Roy Smith wrote: It ATC is allowed to send you direct to an IF, then the distinction between IF and IAF has, for all practical matters, been eliminated. If that's the case, then the databases and/or software needs to be updated to have the IFs show up in the menu. It will take quite a few years for the FAA to identify all the IFs. Direct-to-the IF is not an "if" for RNAV IAPs. ;-) It's been in the AIM and 7110.65 for about a year now. What's to identify? If it is not an IAF, and not the FAF, and is on an intermediate segment, it is an IF. Why does it need to be "identified"? PCG: INTERMEDIATE FIX- The fix that identifies the beginning of the intermediate approach segment of an instrument approach procedure. The fix is not normally identified on the instrument approach chart as an intermediate fix (IF). Intermediate Approach- The segment between the intermediate fix or point and the final approach fix. (Is that circular, or what?) |
#28
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Stan Prevost wrote:
"Sam Spade" wrote in message ... Roy Smith wrote: It ATC is allowed to send you direct to an IF, then the distinction between IF and IAF has, for all practical matters, been eliminated. If that's the case, then the databases and/or software needs to be updated to have the IFs show up in the menu. It will take quite a few years for the FAA to identify all the IFs. Direct-to-the IF is not an "if" for RNAV IAPs. ;-) It's been in the AIM and 7110.65 for about a year now. What's to identify? If it is not an IAF, and not the FAF, and is on an intermediate segment, it is an IF. Why does it need to be "identified"? Because sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the initial segment, and sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the intermediate segment. In that event you do not know which fix is the intermediate fix (well, we're really speaking of waypoints since this is an RNAV-only procedure). If there is only one fix between the IAF and the FAF that, indeed, is the IF. You are free to determine that on a ad hoc basis as are controllers. Jeppesen and NACO, are not. They will not designate the IF until it appears on the official source. The database vendors, if they chose to designate IFs in the database, would also not do it on an ad hoc basis. That's the way the procedures and charting systems work. |
#29
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![]() "Sam Spade" wrote in message ... Stan Prevost wrote: "Sam Spade" wrote in message ... What's to identify? If it is not an IAF, and not the FAF, and is on an intermediate segment, it is an IF. Why does it need to be "identified"? Because sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the initial segment, and sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the intermediate segment. In that event you do not know which fix is the intermediate fix (well, we're really speaking of waypoints since this is an RNAV-only procedure). OK, that helps. Although, as Roy said, it doesn't seem to matter much, the distinction has become blurred. The controller is supposed to issue an altitude restriction for the vector that is consistent with the MVA/MIA, thus insuring obstacle clearance, so it is not obvious why IAF vs IF vs stepdown fix really matters. But, the rule ought to be clear. I had thought that all the fixes between an IAF (or the beginning of the procedure) and the FAF are IFs (disregarding fix vs waypoint). Apparently that is not true, given stepdown fixes on the initial segment. Don't think I have seen one of those, but they seem to be allowed by TERPS. But I also thought that all fixes on the intermediate segment were IFs. But that does not seem to meet the definition of IF in the P/CG. The altitude issue is a big problem with this business of vectoring to the IF on RNAV approaches. If the IF altitude is not at or above MVA/MIA, the approach may not be flyable with vectors to IF. 7110.65 does not give guidance to controllers on that issue, that I can find. |
#30
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Stan Prevost wrote:
"Sam Spade" wrote in message ... Stan Prevost wrote: "Sam Spade" wrote in message ... What's to identify? If it is not an IAF, and not the FAF, and is on an intermediate segment, it is an IF. Why does it need to be "identified"? Because sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the initial segment, and sometimes there is a stepdown fix, or two, in the intermediate segment. In that event you do not know which fix is the intermediate fix (well, we're really speaking of waypoints since this is an RNAV-only procedure). OK, that helps. Although, as Roy said, it doesn't seem to matter much, the distinction has become blurred. The controller is supposed to issue an altitude restriction for the vector that is consistent with the MVA/MIA, thus insuring obstacle clearance, so it is not obvious why IAF vs IF vs stepdown fix really matters. But, the rule ought to be clear. Look at KSEA RNAV 16L. That was recently revised to designate the IF. Prior to January 18 you had several fixes between the IF and the FAF and you didn't know which one was the IF. I could search all night and find some like this without IF designated. It was decided that sending an aircraft to a fix within the IF is into a narrow area that is more properly handled with vectors to final. But, where there are multiple stepdown fixes in the intermediate odds are the MVA would be too high to be compatible with descent requirements. I had thought that all the fixes between an IAF (or the beginning of the procedure) and the FAF are IFs (disregarding fix vs waypoint). Apparently that is not true, given stepdown fixes on the initial segment. Don't think I have seen one of those, but they seem to be allowed by TERPS. But I also thought that all fixes on the intermediate segment were IFs. But that does not seem to meet the definition of IF in the P/CG. No, The IF is where the rampdown from initial widths to final segment width begins and were 500 feet of obstacle clearance comes into play. The fixes between the IF and FAF are just step-down fixes. The altitude issue is a big problem with this business of vectoring to the IF on RNAV approaches. If the IF altitude is not at or above MVA/MIA, the approach may not be flyable with vectors to IF. 7110.65 does not give guidance to controllers on that issue, that I can find. Yes, it is there and clearly stated. In 4 (f) of 4-8-1 it states "at an altitude that will permit normal descent..." Then the note defines that as 300 feet per mile (f)The aircraft is on a course that will intercept the intermediate segment at an angle not greater than 90 degrees and is at an altitude that will permit normal descent from the Intermediate Fix to the Final Approach Fix. NOTE−Controllers should expect aircraft to descend atapproximately 300 feet per NM when applying guidance insubpara 4(f) above |
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