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bafanguy, the question has been answered, as well as it ever will, by midlife and Asquare. You are not going to find a specific definitive point, like,say, the MAP, or FAF, etc. "Established" depends on knowing your position relative to the "maneuvering zone" within the approach construction. Knowing something about the construction of airspace and obstacle clearance as outlined in TERPs will show you how much lateral and verticle distance you may be away from "centerline" and still be in the "maneuvering zone" for turns and descents. Each approach is different, so the "commonly accepted" methods of insuring you are well within those lateral and verticle distance descriptions of the airspace allowed for the approach is to use the nav instruments we have, ie., "needle off the peg", or "3/4 scale". These are not FAA official definitions of the word "established", but are standardized tolerances for demonstration of pilot certification performance standards. If you can determine that the outbound segment allows, for example, one mile lateral distance from the radial at the vor "abeam" position, and four miles lateral distance from the outbound radial at the ten mile limit, and you have a GPS display that shows you are within this "maneuvering zone" for obstacle clearance at the PT altitude, then you may descend. You are "Established" within this maneuvering zone. If you're still flying vor needles, the commonly accepted method of insuring you are "in the zone" is to wait for some needle movement. But that is a technique - not a regulatory requirement.bafanguy said:Midlife...
What definition YOU ( emphasis again...) are happy with means nothing to the FAA. And I guess that's my point and what makes questions like this so interesting for discussion.
Am I asking the definition of "established" ?? Well, yes Sir. I don't know how to be any more clear about that. It was the gist of the original question.
And, that question remains unanswered...
...uuuh, is that Kerry talkin'?Tinstaafl said:so I may have the outbound descent conditions a bit backwards ie it might have been 'descend after positive outbound determined' and is now 'only descend outbound once within 5 deg'. I certainly remember it both ways but can't quite recall which was first. They may even have been one way, gone the other, then switched back.