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#41
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Sam Spade wrote:
Maule Driver wrote: . Huh? "How to use and not use a GPS' lessons seems to be written all over it. But if you just want to knock the pilots, then nothing will be learned. My personal conclusion and lesson is that you need to stick with your primary navigation instruments and use the backup as backup. But that's me. There are no new lessons to be learned from this accident. Because of the lack of a CVR the NTSB is being speculative about the use of the GPS. Sam that is perhaps the case with most accidents. I hear "We must learn from this." In most cases yet the mistakes are recurring ones. Maybe a listing of pilot screwups would help yet I suspect that you won't reduce accidents much. Technology can help in some cases. Even a simple Garmin with terrain functionality, especially if there is an audible alert, may prevent some accidents yet not flying in those conditions works 100%. Personally, I would prefer to quit hearing about "We can all learn from this fatality" and have those experts determine how to prevent them in the first place. Ron Lee |
#42
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pgbnh wrote:
Not clear (to me at least) is WHY they so clearly lost situational awareness. Based on when they descended to MDA,and when and how they flew the missed, they obviously thought they were someplace other than where they were. But why? Missing the fact that they autosequenced over the NDB might have caused some confusion when flying the hold, but once inbound, both the GPS (if they were using it) and the primary nav (presumedly tuned to the LOC frequency) would both be showing dme to MAP. The gps would count down to zero, the primary nav would go down to 1. How could either relying on a potentially unreliable GPS OR missing the autosequencing have caused them to to fly several miles PAST the MAP thinking that they had not yet reached it? IIRC, they descended to MDA several miles PAST the MAP. They used the MAP as the FAF, and seemed to fly a picture perfect approach thereafter. How could misreading the GPS or NAV cause this?? I'd guess they weren't looking at the DME. The countdown to the FAF and the countdown to the MAP don't look any different except for the waypoint name. Once past what they thought was the FAF, they probably set a normal descent rate, looked at the localizer needle for course, altimeter for MDA and out the window for the runway and never looked at the GPS again. -- Don Poitras |
#43
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Personally, I would prefer to quit hearing about "We can all learn
from this fatality" and have those experts determine how to prevent them in the first place. Um... that's what we're trying to learn from them. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#44
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Jose wrote:
Personally, I would prefer to quit hearing about "We can all learn from this fatality" and have those experts determine how to prevent them in the first place. Um... that's what we're trying to learn from them. Jose Um, do you have to have people fly into buildings to know that it is not a good thing to do? Fly into Class 5 (?) thunderstorms? Scud run in the mountains? Run out of fuel? Take off on a runway that is too short? How many unforeseen accident causes do we really see that a competent pilot with good judgement should know to avoid? Ron Lee |
#45
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Um, do you have to have people fly into buildings to know that it is
not a good thing to do? I'm glad I read the newsgroups. I just learned that crashing is a Bad Thing. ![]() The question is =why= an otherwise good pilot made a bad mistake. Or sometimes, why a small mistake turned out really bad this time. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#46
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I thought about it some more and went back and reread the NTSB report. It
would appear that they were relying on the INFORMATION (CDI & DME) from the GPS, but were not looking at the positional display. If they missed the fact that they had passed the FAF as part of their aborted hold, AND they missed the fact that the GPS had sequenced to the MAP, then they flew inbound on the localizer course thinking they were still outside the FAF. The GPS would be giving them distance information to MAP - they were seeing it as distance to FAF. They then flew a pretty good approach - just displaced by 5-6 miles. They also were pretty obviously navigating by the GPS and not using the primary NAV - or they were at least depending on GPS for DME and not using an independent DME. I am not familiar with the King GPS - the Garmin 530 has a big identifier up on top which shows the waypoint being flown to. The really scary thing is if two pilots with these qualifications can make such a mistake, what hope is there for me? "Don Poitras" wrote in message ... pgbnh wrote: Not clear (to me at least) is WHY they so clearly lost situational awareness. Based on when they descended to MDA,and when and how they flew the missed, they obviously thought they were someplace other than where they were. But why? Missing the fact that they autosequenced over the NDB might have caused some confusion when flying the hold, but once inbound, both the GPS (if they were using it) and the primary nav (presumedly tuned to the LOC frequency) would both be showing dme to MAP. The gps would count down to zero, the primary nav would go down to 1. How could either relying on a potentially unreliable GPS OR missing the autosequencing have caused them to to fly several miles PAST the MAP thinking that they had not yet reached it? IIRC, they descended to MDA several miles PAST the MAP. They used the MAP as the FAF, and seemed to fly a picture perfect approach thereafter. How could misreading the GPS or NAV cause this?? I'd guess they weren't looking at the DME. The countdown to the FAF and the countdown to the MAP don't look any different except for the waypoint name. Once past what they thought was the FAF, they probably set a normal descent rate, looked at the localizer needle for course, altimeter for MDA and out the window for the runway and never looked at the GPS again. -- Don Poitras |
#47
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Mark Hansen wrote:
By the way, I can't take the unit home to practice (or even practice in the plane while on the ramp) because these are club planes, and they don't allow that. Also, there is no PC-based simulator (good thinking B/K!). Same here ... club plane and no sim. I'll buy a Garmin given the chance. Matt |
#48
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Mark Hansen wrote: By the way, I can't take the unit home to practice (or even practice in the plane while on the ramp) because these are club planes, and they don't allow that. Also, there is no PC-based simulator (good thinking B/K!). Same here ... club plane and no sim. I'll buy a Garmin given the chance. 89/B simulator can be found he http://www.bendixking.com/static/simulators/ Matt -- Don Poitras |
#49
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Don Poitras wrote:
pgbnh wrote: Not clear (to me at least) is WHY they so clearly lost situational awareness. Based on when they descended to MDA,and when and how they flew the missed, they obviously thought they were someplace other than where they were. But why? Missing the fact that they autosequenced over the NDB might have caused some confusion when flying the hold, but once inbound, both the GPS (if they were using it) and the primary nav (presumedly tuned to the LOC frequency) would both be showing dme to MAP. The gps would count down to zero, the primary nav would go down to 1. How could either relying on a potentially unreliable GPS OR missing the autosequencing have caused them to to fly several miles PAST the MAP thinking that they had not yet reached it? IIRC, they descended to MDA several miles PAST the MAP. They used the MAP as the FAF, and seemed to fly a picture perfect approach thereafter. How could misreading the GPS or NAV cause this?? I'd guess they weren't looking at the DME. The countdown to the FAF and the countdown to the MAP don't look any different except for the waypoint name. Why would they disregard the DME unless it wasn't working? |
#50
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pgbnh wrote:
I thought about it some more and went back and reread the NTSB report. It would appear that they were relying on the INFORMATION (CDI & DME) from the GPS, but were not looking at the positional display. If they missed the fact that they had passed the FAF as part of their aborted hold, AND they missed the fact that the GPS had sequenced to the MAP, then they flew inbound on the localizer course thinking they were still outside the FAF. The GPS would be giving them distance information to MAP - they were seeing it as distance to FAF. They then flew a pretty good approach - just displaced by 5-6 miles. They also were pretty obviously navigating by the GPS and not using the primary NAV - or they were at least depending on GPS for DME and not using an independent DME. I am not familiar with the King GPS - the Garmin 530 has a big identifier up on top which shows the waypoint being flown to. The really scary thing is if two pilots with these qualifications can make such a mistake, what hope is there for me? Don't beat yourself up. Their operation that day was very incompetent. |
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