InstrumentPilot66 PDF
InstrumentPilot66 PDF
InstrumentPilot66 PDF
No. 66
March-April 2008
CONTENTS
P-RNAV trial
Editors introduction
Light aircraft insurance
Self-flown GA IFR transport
Feedback
14 Years of PPL/IR Europe
PPL/IR Europe AGM
Chairmans corner
Eurostuff
Pilots Talk
Oxygen in general aviation
1
2
5
8
10
11
12
13
14
16
19
PPL/IR Europe is
open to any pilot interested in the operation
of light aircraft under
IFR in Europe. The
annual subscription
is GBP60 and more
details are available
from the Membership
Secretary.
Instrument Pilot is the maga-
Instrument Pilot
Jim Thorpe
Chairman
+44 1989 770355
+44 1989 770511
chairman@pplir.org
David Bruford
Press Secretary
+44 1823 461 310
+44 1823 461 928
pressoffice@pplir.org
Ian Chandler
Secretary & Treasurer
+44 1702 200 353
+44 1702 354 488
treasurer@pplir.org
Paul Draper
NATMAC, PAG, GAA
& EAS Representative
+44 1962 850775
paulr.draper@yahoo.
co.uk
Roger Dunn
CAA GA Strategic
Forum Team Member
+44 1622 814896
+44 1622 817115
R.Dunn@btinternet.
com
Steve Dunnett
Meetings Secretary
+44 2920 875 188
+44 2920 876 749
meetings@pplir.org
Anthony Mollison
Pilot Training Specialist
& BBGA Representative
+44 7813 678373
+44 1202 574020
anthony.mollison@
fsmail.net
David Earle
Instrument Pilot Editor
+44 7802 685642
theeditor@pplir.org
Andrew Lambert
Membership Secretary
+44 7836 793266
+44 1428 751654
andrew.lambert@
ems-uk.com
Timothy Nathan
Web Site Editor
+44 1372 812 469
+44 1372 747 778
webeditor@pplir.org
Eugenio Pozzo
Italian Representative
+39 348 300 6906
+39 041 810 9917
eupozzo@tin.it
Alan South
DfT SES Forum
Representative
+44 1763 838465
+44 1763 838465
alan@littlewissett.
eclipse.co.uk
Membership Administrator
Sali Gray
+44 1452 618899
memsec@pplir.org
66/2007
not be helping, wish I had
started younger). And I fly a
glass cockpit PA32, a Piper
6X, that I brought back from
Florida last summer with a bit
of help from an excellent ferry
pilot (Stuart Mills).
With the arrival of a
new editor comes a fresh
opportunity to comment on
IP. This is your magazine and
I need you to tell me what
you like and dislike, and what
you want and dont want.
There must be some
budding authors out there
with something to say. At
present most of the articles
in IP tend to be written by
a small number of people.
Theres room for your
articles too! Perhaps youve
had an interesting flight
(technically or otherwise);
experienced and solved a
particular problem; found a
useful, different way of doing
things; or undergone training
somewhere and have learned
something worthwhile.
Please consider sharing your
successes. Or perhaps you
have become incredibly
frustrated, and could - in
desperation - write a letter
asking other members for
assistance for me to publish
to IP!
And if I dont have enough
material for an issue I may
have to start writing articles
myself trust me, you wont
want that to happen!
Be gentle with me for a
while please but dont let that
stop you telling me what you
think about IP, preferably by
email.
P-RNAV trial
continued from page 1
Pre-flight planning
I had been given a report of
a previous trial by a Learjet
crew. This was very useful in
highlighting key points of the
procedure one needed to plan
and brief carefully e.g.
I the QNH change when passing a designated waypoint on
each procedure
I the lack of a level-off before
the intercept of the ILS
glidepath
The conventional IFR
Jeppesen charts were consistent
with those published for the
trial. I thought the P-RNAV
presentation was very clear. I
dont think it would have caused
any difficulties to a pilot seeing
this new type of chart for the
first time. The callouts which
depict altitude and speed limits
stand out well and are very
usable in-flight.
David Earle,
Editor
theeditor@pplir.org
Figure 1
66/2007
65/2007
Instrument Pilot
This is a good illustration of why one
has to check RNAV databases against
paper charts the time to find puzzling
discrepancies is not whilst flying the
procedure!
LNAV
Much of the equipment and training
emphasis associated with P-RNAV is about
LNAV and assuring that the required
accuracy (RNP-1 i.e. within 1nm for at least
95% of the flight time compared with 5nm
for basic area navigation) can be safely met.
I found LNAV the most straightforward
part of the procedure. Following a sequence
of RNAV waypoints, with precise turn
initiation and turn path guidance from the
GPS, is significantly simpler than following
a conventional procedure. The GNS480
depicts a magenta line computed path for flyby waypoints on the map display that makes
track guidance very clear. However, just
the GPS text annunciation was sufficient.
I found that if one followed a 10 second
countdown to turn initiation, and then
promptly rolled into a rate 1 turn when the
Turn Now to Track XYZ message was
displayed on the GPS, the procedure could
be flown very accurately.
The GPS also displays a CDI and drives
the HSI CDI when selected as the nav
source. In practice, I found I did not really
use the 2 CDIs. The combination of the
magenta line map, the digital cross-track
error display in nm and the actual ground
track display were the 3 most useful
references for establishing and maintaining
a suitable heading. During straight-line legs
and small track adjustments, I could keep
the cross-track error within 0.05nm. The
maximum cross-track error I believe was less
than 0.1nm, during the turn to NEMAX.
Ahead of each turn I manually reset the
HSI CDI to the new track at each waypoint,
as soon as the 10 second countdown
began, and then reset the heading bug when
established on the next leg track. Although
the GPS map provided better primary
guidance, I did find this process a useful way
to mark the start and end of each turn, and
to provide a back-up to the GPS map (for
example, if, due to distraction, one deviated
from track with the map zoomed in and
lost the magenta line, or needed to select a
Instrument Pilot
VNAV
In this aircraft, there is no VNAV guidance
available from the GPS, and thus altitude
limits had to be read from the paper chart
and rate of descent managed manually from
raw data. This felt more demanding than
following LNAV commands from the GPS.
I targeted being at the minimum flight level/
altitude at each waypoint. The procedure
has a gradient of 300ft/nm, except for the
shallower first two segments from VELAG
to NSX26 (9nm and 2000ft descent). This
is helpful, because it allows you to establish
the descent initially and then follow a rule of
thumb of descent rate (fpm) = 5x Ground
Speed (knots) for the rest of the procedure.
I found it reasonably straightforward
to meet the altitude targets, although the
descent profile was not quite continuous.
Before each waypoint I found myself
applying pitch changes to make sure I would
be low enough to meet my target altitude,
and often briefly levelling off just before a
waypoint. It might have been easier, and
certainly smoother, to target being 200ft
above the minimum limit in order not to
have to level-off if the target altitude was
reached slightly before the waypoint.
Speed
Vno for this aircraft is 200kts and the limit
for gear extension and approach flaps is
176kts.
I targeted 190kts until the 180kts speed
limit at NSX11. In the clean configuration,
this requires a 50% power setting to achieve
a 950fpm descent i.e. 300ft/nm. This is the
performance I would usually aim for on
a conventional arrival at a large airport or
when requested to keep the speed up by
ATC.
I found I could maintain my target
speed to within 5kts, except for momentary
deviations of up to 10kts, which were hard to
avoid when adjusting the descent profile as
described above.
In general, speed control was easier than
in a radar vectored arrival because of the
continuous nature of the descent. With radar
vectors, the difficulty for a piston aircraft
66/2007
Where to start?
If you are looking for cover, or to change, youll either ask a flying
chum or trawl the Internet. Either way youll probably end up with
the same group of underwriters as there are only a few to choose
from but those underwriters get their business from numerous subbrokers, and its a useful extra string to your bow to have your policy
routed through such an organisation. It doesnt cost any extra as the
sub-brokers commission is paid by the underwriter and in the event
of a problem youll have an expert to negotiate with the underwriter
or loss adjuster on your behalf.
P6
to the ILS, with several ATC step-down descents prior to the FAP.
A piston aircraft would often be asked to keep the speed up or to
advise ATC of best speed and then instructed to maintain that.
Workload elements favouring the conventional procedure:
Fewer waypoints
Fewer altitude and speed restrictions on charts
Radar vectors are simple to follow, without pilot interpretation of
charts or nav aids
Workload elements favouring the P-RNAV procedure:
RNAV guidance easier and simpler than radio aid raw data but
more complex than radar vectors
Arrival LNAV and VNAV is highly predictable and situational
awareness is more easily maintained compared to radar vectored
arrival
RNAV guided alignment onto final approach track easier than
traditional ILS intercept
Fewer RTF communications needed
In this trial, I would judge that the workload on the P-RNAV
procedures was somewhat higher than in a conventional arrival. In
particular, during a sequence of relatively short legs on the NEMAX
1A, I did find my instrument scan needed rapidly to cover the GPS,
the paper chart and the primary flight instruments checking in
particular that I had not muddled up the target altitude amongst the
succession of waypoints. I was a little tense and conscious of wanting
to avoid errors given the nature of the flight. The NEMAX 2B felt
less workload intensive.
On balance, and with more practice and familiarity, I do not
believe the procedure workload under manual flight would be
particularly different from conventional arrivals. These can be quite
variable some radar vectored arrivals are relatively easy, when
circumstances and ATC technique are favourable; some are more
66/2007
difficult e.g. when descents and intercepts are late and abrupt.
In practice, I would fly these procedures using the autopilot in
roll-steering mode, where no manual intervention is needed for
LNAV until the ILS mode selection prior to the FAP. The constant
descent would be maintained manually through the autopilot pitch
command wheel. Under autoflight, I think the P-RNAV workload
would be lower than in a conventional arrival with fewer heading bug
and altitude select changes and fewer radio aid selections. The main
task becomes monitoring the arrival.
Speed limits
P-RNAV compliance is available to all suitably equipped aircraft. In
the future, therefore, there will be piston aircraft that are P-RNAV
compliant, but not able to meet the speed targets in some procedures.
It would be useful if speed limits rather than targets were used, as
they are for all but one waypoint in each of the NEMAX 1A and
2B procedures. Clearly, an aircraft assigned a procedure it cannot
comply with will declare this to ATC, and can be radar vectored.
I imagine that, when separation permits, ATC may direct such an
aircraft to simply follow the P-RNAV procedure at best speed. It
would be useful for both RTF phraseology and perhaps some arrival
speed remark convention for the flight plan to be developed for these
circumstances, as P-RNAV procedures become more widespread.
Instrument Pilot
Be prepared
So, how do you sound like you know what
youre talking about when asking for a quote
and want to be offered the most competitive
rate? Lets break down the questions as they
will be asked of you, by phone or form, and
what they mean to the premium.
Everyone will want your name and
probably your address and contact details.
Dont get all defensive. Would you want
to deal with anyone that wants to stay
anonymous?
The pilots details will be required so
collate this in advance. Youll need the
names, occupations, ages, ratings, total
hours and hours on type (type being the
type of aircraft that you are seeking to
insure). It would also be very useful to know
the total hours and hours on type from each
pilot for the past 12 months; underwriters
like to feel that the pilots that they are
insuring are current.
Aircraft details; all straightforward
youll need to know the make & model,
year registration, maximum take off weight
(some insurers refer to it as maximum take
off mass) and value.
Aircraft value? Is that what you paid for
it? No. Its very important to base this on
the current worth because aircraft values are
agreed at the inception of the policy date.
The annual premium is based upon the
hull value plus a consideration for liability
insurance, so the higher the hull value is, the
more you pay but of course, the higher the
payout in the event of a total loss. This value
remains the same at each renewal unless you
elect to change it so you must increase it
after you have an avionics refit, new engine,
re-upholstery or a re-spray (dont wait until
renewal an accident or loss wont time
themselves to that date). If the sale value
increases, tell the insurers, otherwise the
agreed value could work against you.
Youll also have to disclose the seating
capacity including the crew. The liability
premium is based upon the maximum
number of people on board but dont,
for instance, state that its a four-seater if
you will ever carry five. You might save a
few pounds but it will cost you a personal
fortune if there is a personal injury claim
and the underwriters can legitimately decline
to pay.
Instrument Pilot
66/2007
Cover is not restricted to licensed airfields - nor even those littered with boulders.
Photo courtesy of Chris Bosher
knowledge you gained from the information
above you can make contact with any
broker or underwriter and give them the
right information so that they can give you
a like-for-like quote. Dont hesitate to ask
them about any features of their cover that
the opposition may not offer. Some policies
dont impose an excess for total losses,
some will include any pilot authorised by
the policyholder at the same premium that
others will require named pilots and still
charge for additions. Some have limits for
search and rescue, others dont, some include
airside cover for your car, personal effects,
and others include MoD airfield cover
without additional charge.
66/2007
Instrument Pilot
Vasa Babic continues with part three of a four-part series on self-flown GA IFR transport in Europe
Ground handling
Fuelling
Instrument Pilot
Pre-flight Planning
Some of the planning issues for this kind of
flying have been discussed in the sections
above, so I will only summarise the resources
and process I use to try and make the task
reasonably quick and easy. Most of these
notes will be fairly obvious, but Ill detail
them in case the reader finds some new and
useful items. My system takes two to four
hours for a new destination, and 30 to 60
minutes to update the plan for a trip Ive
flown previously.
Websites resources
66/2007
Software resources
Hardware resources
Other resources
66/2007
Regular destinations
Summary
Instrument Pilot
Safety conclusions
To what extent does this profile of
self-flown IFR transport introduce
new safety issues and how can they be
managed?
I
Human factors and
decision-making
Any transport flying, by definition,
imposes some pressure to complete a
flight. In planning a schedule, I think
there are two ways to avoid overstretching your aeronautical decisionmaking with difficult conflicts.
First, the capability to execute flights
safely must comfortably exceed the
requirements of a travel schedule. Ill
discuss some of the technical issues
about capability below, but the working
day must also leave you fit to fly home.
I find that two to four hour flights
between different cities are OK for a set
of individual meetings, but not a series
of long working days.
Second, the consequences of
cancelling a flight must always be
reasonably acceptable. On business, if
a trip can be abandoned at short notice
and easily rescheduled, thats fine. If
its a critical deal or meeting, then you
must have a plan B. For personal travel,
you have to be comfortable that the
cost of private flying will occasionally
include last-minute airline tickets, hotels
and airplane recovery.
In practice, I find I naturally build
these factors into the feasibility
planning stage described above. Flying
oneself is too much hassle if its not
going to be enjoyable and stress-free.
I
Standard operating
procedures and single-pilot
resource management
I think this profile of flying has several
advantages for the private instrumentrated pilot. First, you maintain relatively
good IFR currency. Second, you build
good experience outside of comfortable,
familiar routes. Third, you operate in a
highly controlled environment, scaled
to airline safety needs. For example, I
think its easier to fly an ILS to minima
at an airport with a 12,000 ft runway
and full approach lighting than to a
small regional airport.
However, each of these advantages
brings a corresponding challenge, which
Instrument Pilot
Operations manual
Feedback
10
66/2007
Small successes
Eventually our efforts were rewarded by
membership of two lesser committees,
the Standing Advisory Committee on
Personnel Licensing (SACPL) and the
BRNAV Implementing Committee. Both
these committees were mainly populated by
airline oriented people plus a solitary GA
66/2007
11
Instrument Pilot
came in 2000 through GASCo. In the absence of any other willing
candidate I agreed to become its chairman. In this position it was
clearly sensible that I should sit on the GACC. However, GASCo
already had a representative on the GACC and nobody wished
to remove him for the newcomer. I proposed that I should sit on
the GACC as the PPL/IR Europe representative and raise both
GASCo and PPL/IR Europe matters. This was accepted and we
have retained our seat ever since, although I no longer chair GASCo.
GASCo also provided the key to NATMAC. Initially I
represented GASCo and PPL/IR Europe, but eventually it was
agreed that PPL/IR Europe should be separately represented. Paul
Draper is now our representative on NATMAC.
I believe that PPL/IR Europe has made significant contributions
to both these bodies and important regulatory changes have emerged
as a result of our efforts.
PROGRAMME
10:30
11:00
12:15
Lunch
13:15
RNAV for GA
Vasa Babic, PPL/IR Europe executive member
A review of RNAV as it affects European GA pilots with a
focus on the training requirements and regulatory status of PRNAV terminal procedures and GPS approaches.
14:30
14:45
Afternoon coffee/tea
15:00
AGM
The agenda for the 2008 AGM and proxy voting forms is
being sent to members electronically.
16:00
Instrument Pilot
REGISTRATION
I hope to attend the meeting on 19th April 2008.
Name:
..............................
Accompanying person(s)
..............................
I will arrive by Air / other mode of transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A/C type
..............................
A/C reg
..............................
ETA
. . . . . . . . . . . . . from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ETD
. . . . . . . . . . . . . to
.........................
POB
..............................
Pilot/Passengers names
..............................
Dietary requirements - Regular / Vegetarian / Other . . . . . . . . . . . .
12
66/2007
must recruit more active
members, particularly in
Germany and Belgium,
who are able and willing
to assist in this process.
There is no doubt in my
mind that the European
officials that I have
met will welcome a
constructive contribution
from us, provided it is
properly thought out and
well presented. We cannot
expect them to resist
pressure from the pilots
unions and the airlines, if
we fail to stake
our claims.
t is hard to believe
that Roger is giving
up being a member of
the PPL/IR Europe
Executive (and also a
Director) at the forthcoming
AGM, especially as he has
been so involved from the
start. His article paints a
simple picture of what he
has achieved for us over
many years. But the more
accurate picture is that he
has been a stalwart member
of the Executive who has
given us his invaluable
advice and sterling input
in many subject areas. In
particular, convincing
the many Government
and State agencies with
whom we interface that we
need to be listened to and
have a relevant message
for them. His persistence
in ensuring the message
is properly researched,
given and received has
to be experienced to be
believed! Roger, we give
you our sincere thanks for
your contribution, you
will be sorely missed on the
Executive and the many
committees you have served
on for us but I am glad you
are remaining a member.
Paul Draper
66/2007
13
Instrument Pilot
EUROSTUFF
By John Pickett
European Parliament
Instrument Pilot
14
66/2007
Mode S
The UK CAA has announced that following the completion of the
consultation process, the changes agreed would come into force on
the 31st March 2009. The consultation period closes on the 31st
May this year.
The Authority has said that general aviation aircraft that cannot
re-equip with Mode S transponders by the deadline will not be
grounded. But there is a warning Aircraft that are not equipped
with transponders may find it difficult to get ATC clearance to enter
certain airspace.
Meanwhile, Eurocontrol, the European Organization for the
Safety of Air Navigation, has started allocating a new type of Mode
S Interrogator Code to cope with the expansion of Secondary
Surveillance Radar Mode S (SSR Mode S) systems in Europe. The
new interrogator code is called a surveillance identifier (SI) code.
There are 63 SI codes, and the first of these have been allocated to
Mode S radar installations in France and the Netherlands, resulting
in extended Mode S surveillance coverage.
Lembit Opik MP
Finnish deficiencies
EASA has recently given the Finnish Civil Aviation Authority
26 notices of deficiencies. These deficiencies were discovered in
inspections carried out late last year. Two of the warnings were for
serious incidents.
Flying in Greece
66/2007
15
Instrument Pilot
Pilots Talk
Instrument Pilot
16
Courchevel
The French DGAC has recently
promulgated a rule to the effect that any
foreign pilot wishing to use an altisurface
or altiport must hold a valid French issued
authorisation.
See: www.sia.aviation-civile.gouv.fr/doss
ier%5Caicfrancea%5CAIC_A_2007_23_
EN.pdf. Previously, the holder of a Swiss,
Austrian, German or Italian mountain
rating was entitled to land without specific
authorisation. This is fairly academic for
the Brits, but it probably makes the French
rating the qualification of choice for aspiring
mountain pilots.
66/2007
Challenger 604
Manchester celebrates
freedom from price controls
66/2007
17
Instrument Pilot
Instrument Pilot
section/news/tpl/article/BrowsingType/
Features/ID/89466). Structures that cause
shadows for todays radar systems, a
problem for ground surveillance at large,
sprawling airports, do not impair the
magnetic field detectors. Recent tests of the
system in Greece and Germany showed that
it could detect 100 percent of the passing
aircraft, and pinpointed their location
to within 7.5 meters [25 feet], a level of
accuracy comparable to most existing air
traffic management systems, says researcher
Haibin Gao. The system uses an array of
small, cheap sensor units, which could be as
small as a coin in the future. They can be
installed at the entry and exit points of each
runway, and would be affordable even for
small airports.
The researchers now are looking for
investors to certify the technology and bring
it to the market.
FOR SALE
GRUMMAN AA5B TIGER
1979 TT & TTE 1516
18
66/2007
Test Methodology
I
66/2007
19
Instrument Pilot
Oxygen Regulators
continued from page 19
Demand regulators
So far, the systems discussed deliver a
constant flow, regardless of the breathing
cycle. A second category of system senses
actual demand for oxygen by detecting
the users breathing, and adjusting
oxygen according to that demand. While
superficially this does sound similar to the
Oxysaver cannula operation, this is superior
as it shuts off the oxygen flow completely,
while at higher flows the Oxysaver reservoir
will just spill over.
Instrument Pilot
Wearing comfort
On a four hour flight, oxygen consumption
is not the only consideration. All cannulae
offer a similar comfort level, with the
Oxysaver needing some time to get used
to, but not unduly so, as long as you dont
look into a mirror. The basic constant flow
system has the drawback that, due to its
excessive oxygen flow, it irritates the nose
more when used for long; and the Mountain
High pulse is quite sharp and noticeable, so
overall the PreciseFlow is the least obtrusive
system, despite its somewhat fat cannulae.
But overall, none of the systems has any
major drawbacks ruling it out for long
flights.
User interface
Ball flow-meters are a bit fiddly and require
full attention for about 30 seconds each
time you have to adjust the flow rate. When
operating alone, it is best to set them to the
target rate on the ground and then check
later they still are ok. PreciseFlow have a
simple twist wheel to set the altitude you
fly at and this is much more convenient.
Mountain High is the only system that
automatically adjusts the rate as you climb
and descent, beating the others hands-down.
Safety considerations
First of all, loss of oxygen at FL180 is not
catastrophic, as long as you notice it. Time
of useful consciousness is 15-20 minutes. All
systems tested can fail without warning and
all but the Mountain High system do not
give any positive indication of a failure e.g. a
blocked or kinked oxygen line. For constant
flow systems you could notice the ball in the
flow-meter dropping and PreciseFlow and
20
66/2007