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#2
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I think you my have been just a little misleading. We surely agree
the missed approach may not be flown until at the MAP, but of course the pilot is under no obligation to descend to the minimum allowable altitude. The slightly misleading point is a miss may not include an initial turn. Should the pilot choose to abort the landing early (s)he can climb. I am not sure, but would expect the pilot owns the airspace up to the altitiude of his/her final approach fix until the missed approach point is reached (unless cleared higher, of course), and then owns the altitudes published on the approach plate for the miss. Finally, and it might be interest to the intial poster, good pilots who are flying an instrument approach are thinking about flying the miss -- initial heading, gear up, adjust flaps, climb to altitude, all of that-- rather than landing the airplane. Finding the runway, which happens nearly all of the time, is treated as a happy accident. The alternative, thinking about the landing and not the miss, could leave someone low and slow in clouds trying to figure out what to do next. That can lead to unhappy accidents. Please feel free to correct errors or other misleading statements I've made. turnOn Jan 11, 11:07*pm, Airbus wrote: In article , says... Opps, sent a blank message. Someone may have already pointed this out, if so, sorry for the duplication, Brian, if one is flying a precision instrument approach, like an ILS, that has a glideslope, when one arrives at 'minimums' the runway environement must be is sight if the landing is to be continued. It would not be uncommon for ILS minimum altitude *to be 200 feet above ground, so there aren't too many seconds left to decend that last 200 feet. See the runway or fly the missed approach. There are other kinds of approaches, called non precision *approaches. These take you you to the vicinity of the airport for circling approaches, or near the approach end of the runway, but do not give altitude information. What happens with these is the airplane passes over a final approach fix, which is some form of radio derived point, and then the approach documentation permits the airplane to decend to a fixed altitude. At that point it will have reached minimiums, but the pilot in general will depend on a clock and airspeed estimates to tell when (s)he should be over the airport. (S)he does NOT have fly the missed approach when the airplane reaches the minimum altitude permitted by the approach, but when the estimated position is close to the airport. Think of a small airport in a flat region near the coast. If the approach is from the water siide it might be reasonable for the airplane to go down to 500 feet two NM from the airport, then continue flying toward it for another minute (if speed over the bottom is120 kts), before flying the miss. Sorry if this is all redundant. Not necessarily redundant, but somewhat incorrect. No obligation that the MDA and the MAP be close to each other, as you suggest. Some pilots do try to descend progressively to arrive at the MDA at or near the MAP, but others "dive and drive" losing altitude first, then driving forward to the MAP. At the MAP, if one of the visual items on the list is not in continuous view, (s)he MUST initiate the missed approach. The missed approach may be initiated in advance by climbing straight ahead, but no turns may be initiated until reaching the MAP.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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#4
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It's interesting that you find most pilots expect to land. The guy I
fly with (aka husband) briefs himself and me on the miss before reaching the final approach fix every time -- it's part of his checklist, I think just before extending the gear at the outer marker. Lots of redundancy on that check list, too -- how many times can you extend the gear on an approach anyway? (yeah, yeah, I know.) On Jan 12, 1:15*am, Airbus wrote: In article , says... I think you my have been just a little misleading. We surely agree the *missed approach may not be flown until at the MAP, but of course the pilot is under no obligation to descend to the minimum allowable altitude. The slightly misleading point is a miss may not include an initial turn. Should the pilot choose to abort the landing early (s)he can climb. I am not sure, but would expect the pilot owns the airspace up to the altitiude of his/her final approach fix until the missed approach point is reached (unless cleared higher, of course), and then owns the altitudes published on the approach plate for the miss. Finally, and it might be interest to the intial poster, good pilots who are flying an instrument approach are thinking about flying the miss -- initial heading, gear up, adjust flaps, climb to altitude, all of that-- rather than landing the airplane. Finding the runway, which happens nearly all of the time, is treated as a happy accident. The alternative, thinking about the landing and not the miss, could leave someone low and slow in clouds trying to figure out what to do next. That can lead to unhappy accidents. That's an excellent point - oft taught, oft forgot! It just goes against our nature. All pilots I know - good or otherwise - are expecting to land. The controllers are expecting it too. But at least - even if you're expecting to land, at least prepare for the missed - know it, brief it, set up frequencies for it *- *otherwise going missed can coincide with going missing (sometimes for years!!)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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Tina wrote in
: I think you my have been just a little misleading. We surely agree the missed approach may not be flown until at the MAP, but of course the pilot is under no obligation to descend to the minimum allowable altitude. The slightly misleading point is a miss may not include an initial turn. Should the pilot choose to abort the landing early (s)he can climb. I am not sure, but would expect the pilot owns the airspace up to the altitiude of his/her final approach fix until the missed approach point is reached (unless cleared higher, of course), and then owns the altitudes published on the approach plate for the miss. Finally, and it might be interest to the intial poster, good pilots who are flying an instrument approach are thinking about flying the miss -- initial heading, gear up, adjust flaps, climb to altitude, all of that-- rather than landing the airplane. Finding the runway, which happens nearly all of the time, is treated as a happy accident. The alternative, thinking about the landing and not the miss, could leave someone low and slow in clouds trying to figure out what to do next. That can lead to unhappy accidents. Please feel free to correct errors or other misleading statements I've made. Nope, very good and absolutlely correct, especially the part about preparing for the go-around. Bertie |
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