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The GPS RWY 17 approach at Aurora State (UAO), Aurora, Oregon, contains a
note near the top left: http://www.airnav.com/depart?http://...4/05722R17.PDF "Procedure NA for arrivals at UBG VOR/DME on airway radials 013 CW 085." There are two Victor airways to UBG, one on the 013 radial and the other on the 085 radial. What exactly does that note mean and why is that an issue? It sounds like the note prohibits use of this approach if you are arriving from the northeast (between the UBG 013 and 085 radials). But I can't see any obstruction issue or interference with another airport's traffic pattern, since the minimum altitude is 4,000' in an area near sea level. If you overflew UBG for 5 miles and then turned back to UBG, would that make the approach legal to fly? Dennis Johnson |
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"Dennis Johnson" wrote:
The GPS RWY 17 approach at Aurora State (UAO), Aurora, Oregon, contains a note near the top left: http://www.airnav.com/depart?http://...4/05722R17.PDF "Procedure NA for arrivals at UBG VOR/DME on airway radials 013 CW 085." Could it be because the Portland airport is in that direction? Ron Lee |
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On 5/7/2007 1:48:08 PM, "Dennis Johnson" wrote:
If you overflew UBG for 5 miles and then turned back to UBG, would that make the approach legal to fly? Lake Placid, NY, has these types of restrictions on their GPS approaches. http://www.myairplane.com/databases/...fs/09371RA.PDF Upon preparing for the flight to LKP a few years ago I had seen the note on the above chart and asked a more experienced IFR pilot about it. He told me that these types of notes are common when the required course direction change after the IAF is too great. TERPS doesn't want aircraft making that large a course change in the clouds, presumably in this case due to the nearby mountains. I was told that if you do not have the option to choose a more aligned IAF based on arrival direction (and that radar vectors are not available), then file to a VOR, intersection, or GPS fix that does provide a more direct arrival to the IAF and plan on jumping off the airway sooner to fly direct to that point. -- Peter |
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Peter R. wrote:
On 5/7/2007 1:48:08 PM, "Dennis Johnson" wrote: If you overflew UBG for 5 miles and then turned back to UBG, would that make the approach legal to fly? Lake Placid, NY, has these types of restrictions on their GPS approaches. http://www.myairplane.com/databases/...fs/09371RA.PDF Upon preparing for the flight to LKP a few years ago I had seen the note on the above chart and asked a more experienced IFR pilot about it. He told me that these types of notes are common when the required course direction change after the IAF is too great. TERPS doesn't want aircraft making that large a course change in the clouds, presumably in this case due to the nearby mountains. I was told that if you do not have the option to choose a more aligned IAF based on arrival direction (and that radar vectors are not available), then file to a VOR, intersection, or GPS fix that does provide a more direct arrival to the IAF and plan on jumping off the airway sooner to fly direct to that point. And sometimes they just get it wrong. http://myairplane.com/databases/appr...s/05842R23.PDF shows such a restriction, but the NA from VOLAN is backwards. Should read approach NA from VOLAN eastbound, not westbound. |
#5
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On 2007-05-07, Dennis Johnson wrote:
The GPS RWY 17 approach at Aurora State (UAO), Aurora, Oregon, contains a note near the top left: http://www.airnav.com/depart?http://...4/05722R17.PDF "Procedure NA for arrivals at UBG VOR/DME on airway radials 013 CW 085." There seems to be a similar prohibition on the GPS 35. Both restrictions look like they are trying to avoid "U turns" at UBG. The LOC 17 actually uses BTG as the IAF, or maybe it would have a similar note? -- Ben Jackson AD7GD http://www.ben.com/ |
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