PeanuckleCRJ
Hurrrrrrrr
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2004
- Posts
- 1,684
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Only with reference to specific procedures and profile flying. The FAF on the ILS is depicted by the maltese cross on the approach. It can be defined only by a second navaid or DME.
Its called a "fluid conversation". Try to visualize things "outside the box". I am trying to clarify things to someone who was completely wrong about what he/she said. I got a little mixed up and made a boo-boo. Get over it, I did. Lets keep talking.Man ...
You are WRONG..
So much for reading your posts in the future.
You are quick to spout off but evidently should read more and talk/post less!
yes it is. the final approach fix on an ILS is ALWAYS the PUBLISHED Glide Slope Intercept Altitude (including any lower authorized altitude which will be noted on the plate). The FAF doesn't magically move depending on where you decided to intercept at. On NACO charts it's the lightning bolt symbol and on Jepps it's where the published altitude intercepts the feather. The Maltese cross is for non-precision use ONLY. I think that you are confusing the published glideslope altitude at the FIX (which is for "reality check" purposes) and the GSIA. In the case of CVG's ILS 18C, they are the same. Check out BOS ILS 4R. The GSIA/FAF is 1800, but the GS altitude at MILTT is 1723.Yeah, that was my bad.
My point still stands. GS intercept is not always the FAF on a precision approach.
No its not.yes it is.
It will be the lowest altitude only. There will be no other step downs for a precision approach.the final approach fix on an ILS is ALWAYS the PUBLISHED Glide Slope Intercept Altitude (including any lower authorized altitude which will be noted on the plate).
Thats what I am saying!The FAF doesn't magically move depending on where you decided to intercept at.
I did, and I noted that. Thanks.On NACO charts it's the lightning bolt symbol and on Jepps it's where the published altitude intercepts the feather. The Maltese cross is for non-precision use ONLY. I think that you are confusing the published glideslope altitude at the FIX (which is for "reality check" purposes) and the GSIA.
i don't understand this statement. give me an example of when you think the FAF on an ILS is not the published GSIA. remember that i am saying there may be a caveat on the plate that a lower GSIA is authorized. for example, the lightning bolt altitude will say something like "*1500 when authorized by ATC" and only used if ATC clears you down to that altitude PRIOR to intercepting. either way, it will still be PUBLISHED on the plate. the FAF can't ever be some point or location that gets made up on the fly.No its not.
It will be the lowest altitude only. There will be no other step downs for a precision approach.
I am talking about a straight forward ILS approach. Special notations do not apply to what I am talking about.i don't understand this statement. give me an example of when you think the FAF on an ILS is not the published GSIA. remember that i am saying there may be a caveat on the plate that a lower GSIA is authorized. for example, the lightning bolt altitude will say something like "*1500 when authorized by ATC" and only used if ATC clears you down to that altitude PRIOR to intercepting. either way, it will still be PUBLISHED on the plate. the FAF can't ever be some point or location that gets made up on the fly.
GLIDESLOPE INTERCEPT ALTITUDE- The minimum altitude to intercept the glideslope/path on a precision approach. The intersection of the published intercept altitude with the glideslope/path, designated on Government charts by the lightning bolt symbol, is the precision FAF; however, when the approach chart shows an alternative lower glideslope intercept altitude, and ATC directs a lower altitude, the resultant lower intercept position is then the FAF.
Do you expect everyone to know everything? The truth is, a few people were wrong on this thread, not just one.Discussions on FI are really getting bad...this is basic airmanship stuff...Shouldn't this be in the Flight Instruction section? At the rate we're going we are going to be discussing "ground effect! Myth or Reality?" by the end of the year.
Incorrect. The posters who never actually read the thread and saw that I corrected myself in my next post extended this longer than it should have been.The Russian has extended this thread about ten posts longer than it needed to be.
That is exactly what I stated, proving that people who don't pay attention help to drag this out.Here's the only answer.
Here's the link to the website the definition is located at. Notice the link starts with 'faa.gov', that's a pretty good indication it's good information.GLIDESLOPE INTERCEPT ALTITUDE- The minimum altitude to intercept the glideslope/path on a precision approach. The intersection of the published intercept altitude with the glideslope/path, designated on Government charts by the lightning bolt symbol, is the precision FAF; however, when the approach chart shows an alternative lower glideslope intercept altitude, and ATC directs a lower altitude, the resultant lower intercept position is then the FAF.
Incorrect. The posters who never actually read the thread and saw that I corrected myself in my next post extended this longer than it should have been.
That is exactly what I stated, proving that people who don't pay attention help to drag this out.
Absolutely not.Do you want a cookie?
What?!?! You bumped the thread more than 24 hours after my last post and basically accused the discussion itself of not getting to the point! All the while, if you had read the thread thoroughly, you would see that we had reached the point and clarified everything. Everyone who posts in such a way, extends the thread. Don't be upset with me for using the forum for what it is designed for.You've just extended the thread again to argue that you know what you are talking about. No one cares! You don't have to defend yourself, that is what's extending the thread which adds nothing.
Don't take it so personally.I'm done with this thread, you can have the last word...I'm sure you'll take it.
Can the MD11 Fly down hill in VS? and heading select?while I agree with most posts I also think the FAA could solve many of these problems by slightly changing the procedures.
Many modern jet airliners are not designed to over-ride the gs capture. For example the md-11, except for a few that have loc track only either do approach mode (full ILS) or you must do approach in NAV only which is based on IRU navigation resulting in less than precision tracking. Can it be done, yes, but at the same time my point is people are consistently screwing it up so what can we do to improve the approach?
Exactly.while I agree with most posts I also think the FAA could solve many of these problems by slightly changing the procedures.
What some people say on here really scares me knowing that they are up there!!
A few weeks ago there was a discussion where some seemingly experienced pilots claimed that it wasn't legal to go below DH off an ILS missed.
Soemtimes I scratch my head about the ignorance some professional pilots display of the rules.![]()
Absolutely excellent post. We all have things to learn and we need to extend respect to others when helping to educate them. I, myself, am guilty of being wrong about technical subjects here and there.Boy, no wonder so many people are leaving flight info. Way to help better the general pilot group out there, fellas. Ya know, learning is facilitated through respect, allowing questions, and giving room for improvement. By jumping on people who might not be clear on issues, you are actually facilitating ignorance, rather than clarity. Good attitude, guys!
Just the fact that the controllers are going nuts over a problem being repeated shows that there are plenty of airline pilots unclear on the rules. If there are plenty of pilots unclear on the concept, maybe it's time to look at why they are unclear, rather than personally attacking someone who is unclear. That just doesn't help. The fact that there are apparently many airline pilots making this type of mistake pretty much proves that, in fact, this is not a basic "instrument 101" concept. Learning doesn't stop just 'cause you're an airline pilot. Just because someone passed a 121 ride doesn't mean you already know all there is to be known about flying. Personal attacks aren't going to solve this.
The moral of this thread is: If you aren't sure about something, don't you ever dare to ask about it on flight info.com.
The last time I flew with a CFII was twenty years, four type rides, and two airlines ago. People forget.I can't believe this has gone on for four pages. Someone gave the correct answer within the first few posts. Obviously, KCVG uses this procedure for operational reasons and it seems that the step downs were designed that way on purpose. It looks like a lot of CFIIs haven't been doing a very good job. Scary.