Goose Egg
Big Jens
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2004
- Posts
- 1,719
Stabilized at 1,000' in IMC isn't really that conservative for an ILS approach, especailly for a new instrument pilot.
Forgive me for not elaborating. When I said that being stabilized by 1000' in a light piston was overly conservative, I was referring only to visual approaches. I apologize for not making that clarification. Otherwise, I completely agree with you with one caveat...
That's how I instructed instrument students to execute an ILS approach. Remember, most OM's are about 1,400 HAT and at 1,000' AGL, you're well into the commencement of the glideslope. If you really aren't stabilized (everything being close to a constant, with minimal corrections) by this point in the soup, you had BETTER go around. Chasing needles below 1,000 AGL in IMC is DANGEROUS. The plane should be in severe hands-off trim riding the rails with fingertip corrections.
I think we both define a "stabilized" approach as being configured, on approach track/glideslope, on speed, and straight-in. I would suggest that it's probably better to fly an approach in IMC at a moderately higher speed than the slower approach speed, i.e. in a Cessna 172, for example, the airplane would be more stable and responsive to control inputs if the approach was flown at, say 90 KIAS as apposed to 65. Under the above stated definition, that isn't really "on-speed," and therefore not technically "stabilized." The higher airspeed could possibly dictate a different flap setting, depending on the airplane, so that wouldn't technically be "configured" either.
It wouldn't phase me at all to see a student fly across the marker at 90 kts and 10 degrees of flaps, expecting to slow to landing speed and configure for landing when visual conditions are reached. In fact, I think this is a much safer scenario than 65 kts and flaps 25 at the marker.
Maybe we could say that "configured" meant configured for the approach, and not necessarily the landing. They are two different things.
-Goose
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