Uncle Leo said:
You are doing a full approach with a PT. The inital altitude at the IAF is 4000. The FAF crossing altitude 3000. When can you descend to 3000?
A. When PT inbound and the needle being used to define the final approach
course comes alive.
B. When the needle being used to define the final approach is centered.
C. Something else altogether?
If you have an AIM, FAR, TERPS, or some other reference I could use that too.
Let's clarify a little. I assume your speaking of an approach where the PT altitude is 4000 ft, and the first intermediate altitude is 3000 ft, right?
There are two questions, really:
1) What will keep me from hitting something hard,
and
2) what will keep me from getting a pink slip on a checkride, or an enforcement (should it come to that)
I've always considered the first question to be much more interesting, so we'll deal with that first. On a simple VOR approach with a PT, the intermediate segment protected area is splayed out away from the VOR. 10 miles from the VOR it gives 1000 ft of protection, 4 nm either side of the course, plus an additional 2 nm of diminishing protection. In the extreme example of intercepting the intermediate course 10 nm out (impossible with a PT that remains within 10 nm of the VOR, but we're looking for worst case scenario) you would get a live needle 10 degrees from the inbound course on a normal CDI (5 dots, 2 degrees per dot) at 10 miles and 10 degrees you'd be 1.7 miles off the course centerline, well within the 8 NM (4 nm either side) wide protected area. So, if you start down with a live needle, you won't hit anything, unless you've done something else wrong.
The other question is what is "correct" or legal. When may you descend to the altitude of the next segment? When you're "established" on the next segment, right? What is "established" The FAA doesn't define "established" in terms of degrees. The definition of within 10 degrees of course given by ERJdca comes from ICAO, which is not the official answer for operations within the US, so is interesting, but not particularly relevant. Instead, we have this from the Pilot Controller Glossary:
Established, To be stable or fixed on a route, route segment, altitude, heading, etc.
Now, it is quite common to begin descent upon getting a live needle, but are you established? Look at the plain english meaning of the words. Can you say that you're "stable or fixed" on a course when actually you are on a heading 45 degrees across that course?
I don't know the answer to this, and as far as I know, there is no official clarification, but I can tell you that there are some pilots who are adamant that you have to intercept the course with a centered needle before begining the descent, and there are probably examiners who feel the same way.
I'm not sure I'd want to be in the position of trying to convince an examiner that stable or fixed really means at a 45 degree angle to.