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Landing below glideslope?

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parrothead

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 25, 2003
Posts
67
What is the reg that deals with landing below glideslope when landing is assured? If you're coming down the slope and have landing assured, is it legal to dip below the glideslope so you get it closer to the touchdown zone or do you have to stay on the slope all the way down? There are many versions of a "correct" answer. If anyone can find the reg, please post it. Thanks!!
 
Having flown 91,135 and121 operations, it seems this was more of an issue at the 91 and 135 level. In theory, not descending below glide path or VASI has something to do with the TCH for the wheel carriage clearence on the bigger jets.
Just an observation but for the most part in 121 operations this practice was not acceptable nor common practice has I had seen it before in previous 91 and 135 operators.
91.129 does give you some guidance on this issue but it still leaves room for some grey areas of interpetation.
I hope this helps.
 
Any pilot with precison airmanship skills will control the aircraft energy, staying on either the ILS GS or visual glide path, all the way down to the 1000' marker.



Dipping below the GS or VASI is for amatuers.....
 
Rez O. Lewshun said:
Any pilot with precison airmanship skills will control the aircraft energy, staying on either the ILS GS or visual glide path, all the way down to the 1000' marker.

Dipping below the GS or VASI is for amatuers.....

that is 100% correct, I agree 100% with that one!
 
I ask this because sometimes the speeds are so conservative, that if you know your plane and know that the speeds are going to make you float, how to land in the touchdown zone nicely and not float too much. I am just asking what the legalities are, not what professional practices are. I know what professional practices are! Thanks for all of your comments!
 
DrewBlows said:
Why would you want to go below glideslope?
If your book landing distance is 3600 feet, and you have 3900 feet of runway, dipping below glideslope to touch down at 500 feet from the threshold adds 500 feet to the runway available, increasing the margins.

Note that 91.129 says "until a lower altitude is necessary for a safe landing", not "when landing is assured". I'm sure everybody noticed, but I'm also big on stating the obvious, just in case ;)

Fly safe!

David
 
parrothead said:
I ask this because sometimes the speeds are so conservative, that if you know your plane and know that the speeds are going to make you float, how to land in the touchdown zone nicely and not float too much. I am just asking what the legalities are, not what professional practices are. I know what professional practices are! Thanks for all of your comments!
As far as float goes, if you know your airplane is going to float at the appropriate speed, just reduce to idle sooner and follow the glideslope.

Fly safe!

David
 
MauleSkinner said:
If your book landing distance is 3600 feet, and you have 3900 feet of runway, dipping below glideslope to touch down at 500 feet from the threshold adds 500 feet to the runway available, increasing the margins.
I suppose this is reasonable. I can't relate to this situation though, as I have never had to cut it that close. (Part 121 gives you generous margins, for those of us who slipped though the cracks;).)
 
MauleSkinner said:
If your book landing distance is 3600 feet, and you have 3900 feet of runway, dipping below glideslope to touch down at 500 feet from the threshold adds 500 feet to the runway available, increasing the margins.

Is that even legal under 121 or 135? Does that meet the 60% (or is it 70%?) requirements? (I always mix the 60%/70% up). :confused:

-mini
 
§ 91.129 Operations in Class D airspace.

(e) Minimum Altitudes. When operating to an airport in Class D airspace, each pilot of -

(2) A large or turbine-powered airplane approaching to land on a runway served by an instrument landing system (ILS), if the airplane is ILS equipped, shall fly that airplane at an altitude at or above the glide slope between the outer marker (or point of interception of glide slope, if compliance with the applicable distance from clouds criteria requires interception closer in) and the middle marker; and

(3) An airplane approaching to land on a runway served by a visual approach slope indicator shall maintain an altitude at or above the glide slope until a lower altitude is necessary for a safe landing.

Remember that operations under Parts 121 and 135 are also beholden to Part 91. Parts 119, 121, and 135 merely add additional restrictions to the general operating regulations.
 
minitour said:
Is that even legal under 121 or 135? Does that meet the 60% (or is it 70%?) requirements? (I always mix the 60%/70% up). :confused:

-mini
I don't know about 121, but the 60% rule under 135.385 is only a "takeoff" requirement, not a "landing" requirement. In other words, if things change enroute, you can still land.

It can also be pretty much disregarded under paragraph (e), provided you have an appropriate alternate:
A turbojet airplane that would be prohibited from being taken off because it could not meet paragraph (b)(2) of this section (the 60% rule) may be taken off if an alternate airport is selected that meets all of paragraph (b) of this section.
Fly safe!

David
 
Based out of FCM (Flying Cloud in Minneapolis) where the runway is only 3900 feet, it is common to dip below and aim for the numbers. Everytime we come home, it is like doing a short field approach. I wish MAC would just do this runway extention that they have been talking about for many years.
 
MauleSkinner said:
I don't know about 121, but the 60% rule under 135.385 is only a "takeoff" requirement, not a "landing" requirement. In other words, if things change enroute, you can still land.

It can also be pretty much disregarded under paragraph (e), provided you have an appropriate alternate:

Fly safe!

David

ooooooh...now I get it.

Ya the gleim ATP test prep doesn't really do that reg justice. I get it tho...so I can legally land in that amount of distance...I just can't takeoff in the first place unless my performance numbers (taking into account normal fuel/oil consumption) allow for a landing in 60% of the available (or is it "usable"?) runway.

Very good.

Thanks...dang that clears a lot up...

Back to the question though...
If your numbers show you can land in X feet (3,000 as an example) and the runway is Y (3200) feet long... you should be plenty good to go. Doesn't the landing performance data include crossing the threshold at 50' and touching down on GS?

-mini
 
minitour said:
Back to the question though...
If your numbers show you can land in X feet (3,000 as an example) and the runway is Y (3200) feet long... you should be plenty good to go. Doesn't the landing performance data include crossing the threshold at 50' and touching down on GS?

-mini
Yes, you are, and yes, it does...BUT...have you ever stopped 200 feet short of the end of the runway with max braking? It's not fun...I'll take every advantage I can get.

Fly safe!

David
 
MauleSkinner said:
Yes, you are, and yes, it does...BUT...have you ever stopped 200 feet short of the end of the runway with max braking? It's not fun...I'll take every advantage I can get.

Fly safe!

David

LOL actually....this one time flying my first SE Approach in a Duchess (damn prop wouldn't unfeather)...I was just....a LITTLE fast and uh...

Runway 3 at OUN never seemed so short...we did finally make Bravo though...I had the instructor almost crapping

True...not fun and yes you're right...take every single advantage.

-mini
 
minitour said:
LOL actually....this one time flying my first SE Approach in a Duchess (dang prop wouldn't unfeather)...I was just....a LITTLE fast and uh...

Runway 3 at OUN never seemed so short...we did finally make Bravo though...I had the instructor almost crapping

True...not fun and yes you're right...take every single advantage.

-mini
You can tell it's a guy's first real engine-out landing in a twin just by watching...almost everybody does it that way ;)
 
Back to the question though...
If your numbers show you can land in X feet (3,000 as an example) and the runway is Y (3200) feet long... you should be plenty good to go. Doesn't the landing performance data include crossing the threshold at 50' and touching down on GS?

That was a joke, right??
 

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