Blue Dude
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2003
- Posts
- 848
The problem is if you are close to an airport and ATC left you too high, what do you do first?
Tell ATC to bring you around for a better vector so you don't need heroics at the marker.
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The problem is if you are close to an airport and ATC left you too high, what do you do first?
If safety is no concern, as everyone else has said, slow down then extend the flaps and gear. If safety is any concern at all decline the clearance and request an extended down wind or vector for descent. Don't let ATC push you. These kinds of descents can lead to a number of bad things. If for any reason you must level off unexpectedly (VFR nordo traffic, other side traffic enters your final path, etc) you will be very close to stall speed before you get the engines spooled up. Your AC is in a very vulnerable state. The gear take forever to retract and the first thing that happens if you try to retract them is the doors open and the rate of deceleration increases. Some AC have flaps that may retract quickly but if the gear is out the flaps won't be enough. These descents also precede the majority of unstable approaches.
For safety sake some 'old school' gouge still works very well
Below 10, 3000 fpm max to 3000 AGL
Then the max sinkrate is your altitude AGL until stabilized at 1000'
If you are at idle minimum speed is VREF plus 30
The gear never get extended prior to the FAF on profile or if visual when descending through the pattern altitude - 1500 agl
Most AC can live with this gouge. If you must use some drag for the descent approach flaps and spoilers should be enough for 3000 fpm. Just remember to add 30 knots or so to the published minimum speed for the configuration.
I have seen both regional and 'mainline' crews fully configure at 10, then start an idle descent at the slowest speed possible. It makes the hair stand up on the back of my neck, my skin crawl, stomach get queasy, and body and mind generally revolt. If any little external, unforeseen factor requires a flight path change you will be between a rock and a hard spot with few choices.
Don't let ATC push you. You don't have to accept the clearance. Too many of our brethren do. And ATC knows better. They are just seeing if you will do it to cover their mistake.
Double ditto.Wtf is this??^^^^
Are you serious?
Or even a pilot?
you get paid to get it on the ground, not take a five minute tour to 15Nm final.