uwochris
Flightinfo's sexiest user
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2001
- Posts
- 381
Hey guys.
I got a question regarding GPS.
From the "Aeronautical Information Publication"- section Com 3.16.3:
" The level of integrity for each phase of flight is expressed in terms of horizontal and vertical alert limits... if the satellites in view do not support the applicable alert limit (2 NM enroute, 1 NM terminal, .3 NM non-precision approach), the avionics RAIM function will alert the pilot, but will continue prividing a navigation solution.... pilots must discontinue using GPS for nav when such an alert occurs."
So the question is- what exactly is an alert limit? I have no clue what the significance of the 2nm, 1 nm, or .3nm is. Does anyone have an explanation? I havent found any info in other sources.
Thanks in advance,
Chris.
I got a question regarding GPS.
From the "Aeronautical Information Publication"- section Com 3.16.3:
" The level of integrity for each phase of flight is expressed in terms of horizontal and vertical alert limits... if the satellites in view do not support the applicable alert limit (2 NM enroute, 1 NM terminal, .3 NM non-precision approach), the avionics RAIM function will alert the pilot, but will continue prividing a navigation solution.... pilots must discontinue using GPS for nav when such an alert occurs."
So the question is- what exactly is an alert limit? I have no clue what the significance of the 2nm, 1 nm, or .3nm is. Does anyone have an explanation? I havent found any info in other sources.
Thanks in advance,
Chris.