aaahh, TonyC, I always get that you-should-never-have-got-there response when I use the old gas-needles-bouncing-on-empty scenario. Well, of course, we always always plan on every possible situation, and, when possible, always have plenty of fuel. I always do, because I have had some experiences which got me close to fuel exaustion. Sometimes the actual headwind is extremely stronger than forecast. This is more of a factor in a 3 hour flight in a 120 kt Cessna 172 than in youe big fast airplane. I have been in a normally radar environment in the NY/New England area when the radar went out. Controllers and pilots these days cannot function very efficiently in that "school-only" scenario, and I have found myself being held much longer than anticipated, and everyone is in an emergency situation. Calling emergency-fuel doesn't get you to the head of the line. Anyway, the point is, really, to be able to do the best you can with what you've got. This whole discussion PRESUPPOSES we are completely and totally knowledgable about our whereabouts and the saftey of the situation. I think I am stepping on some toes by implying that these things should be taken lightly. I do not take any of it lightly. I have been doing this a long, long time, more than 40 years, and I would only speak of these kinds of things among pilots I know would not go blindly into an approach without a Procedure Turn when necessary. Maybe I'm wrong to discuss this practice on this board....but it is a learning experience, so here goes anyway.
Mark, Look at the IAP for Greenville-Spartanburg Intl (GSP) in South Carolina.
Let's look a 2 of them. First, the ILS RWY 4.
You could be on V266 from Anderson VOR (AND) and at PELZE intersection get a clearance from over PELZE to the Greer LOM as shown on the published transition. You can see that the transition course is 051 and 19.5 miles on the NDB. Knowing the inaccuracy of NDB tracking, and the fact that you might find yourself on the localizer at 2800 feet as you pass Judky LOM, and if everything is good, you could request a straight-in and continue on in at glideslope intercept.
#2: Look at the ILS RWY 22. You could be on V54 coming from Spartanburg VOR(SPA) which is the 269 radial. The IAP shows a 278 radial transition with NoPT, however, you COULD do the same on the 269 radial IF everything was set and you have no trouble attaining alignment at the intersection of V54 and I-LMJ. This is in a 90 kt simple airplane.
The transitions that show NoPT are RESTRICTED from making a PT unless you specifically request it. Otherwise, these published transitions COULD result in a similar alignment, and it is your option to continue straight-in or make the PT if you are not ready.
I still maintain that the wording in the regulations which say "a course reversal when necessary" - the "when necessary" is up to the pilot. As a matter of practical experience, I would always "request" a straight-in from Approach if I am doing that, but I really don't think it would be a legal necessity. The airspace for the approach is supposed to be yours when you gety a clearance. You COULD do a fast 360 and comply with the PT requirement, so the controller is not clearing you based on an assumption that you will take 4 or 5 minutes to turn around and get lined up. Maybe that is happening in real life, and that is partially why I would always say "straight-in" when I am anticipating the absence of the PT when not on a published NoPT.
The legal wording saying you must fly the approach as depicted, to me, means courses and altitudes. If a course reversal is necessary from your inbound course to the final course, then you have to fly the turn around on the side shown by the barb. For you folks who say "depicted means flying the procedure turn", why does that not include flying the 45-225 barb as depicted?
We agree that the turn can be at any point at any rate, so I could split-S into the glideslope, huh? No, I'm kidding, of course, but just trying to "break the mold" on the "Fixed-Idea" that you MUST do the PT when it is obvious that it is not required. We are trained that way, for safety. You can do a standard approach safely anywhere in the world using these procedures. I know, I know, we do a lot of things redundantly in the interest of SAFETY, and I am not knocking that. But sometimes, an act may be totally safe when you are totally aware of the situation. Actually, I am very surprised to see so much flak on this subject. And, it has been a long time since I did any of this kind of stuff, since everything is radar vectored to final these days, and has been for such a long time now, but, back in the old no-radar days, filing to points of airway and final approach course intersections was common. And that doesn't mean the old way was better; it wasn't. Knowledge, experience, and technology has created a much better environment today, but it has also caused a loss of some ability to think for ourself.
That is all I am attempting to revive; self-awareness and control.