Douglas
Old School KSUX
I think the idea is if you know it, you shouldn't be afraid of being tested on it.
True, I can see that as reasonable.
I think the idea is if you know it, you shouldn't be afraid of being tested on it.
Am I going to have to be the first person to say "if you want the rating, why don't you learn how to fly up to the standards for it"? NDB approaches can be challenging, sure, but they're not exactly splitting the atom. If you can't manage to do one, maybe you shouldn't pass the checkride.
If you don't want to do a NDB approach on the checkride then put an INOP sticker on it. The examiner can't make you fly off a "broken" instrument.
I like NDBs, they're my kind of instrument. It points at the thing, that's it - nice and simple. You can turn wherever you'd like, and it still points at the thing (barring thunderstorms).
If you don't want to do a NDB approach on the checkride then put an INOP sticker on it. The examiner can't make you fly off a "broken" instrument.
I'd recommend you not take this advice. An examiner busted someone for doing that around here. It came out that the CFI had recommended he do it, and he ended up at FSDO for a little talk. I'm not sure the outcome, but I'm sure it's not anything you want to mess with.
I'd be interested if you could report back with how that talk went.
There is nothing illegal with deactivating any part of you own avionics as long as you meet the minimum.
Or was it actually operational with an "INOP" placard?
knowing how people feel about ndb approaches, if i were an examiner i would be giving every applicant one. if you could be assigned one in the real world, you should know how to do it.
Why would you be "assigned" a NDB approach in the "real world"?
If the airport you're flying to only has a NDB approach, that's one thing, but I've never heard of ATC telling a pilot what kind of approach to fly rather than the approach that the pilot requests.
" Approach, Bonanza 1234, request GPS-35 Centennial"
"Bonanza 1234, Approach, sorry, you've gotta fly the NDB today"
Not.
Gonna.
Happen.
Why would you be "assigned" a NDB approach in the "real world"?
If the airport you're flying to only has a NDB approach, that's one thing, but I've never heard of ATC telling a pilot what kind of approach to fly rather than the approach that the pilot requests.
" Approach, Bonanza 1234, request GPS-35 Centennial"
"Bonanza 1234, Approach, sorry, you've gotta fly the NDB today"
Not.
Gonna.
Happen.
Why would you be "assigned" a NDB approach in the "real world"?
If the airport you're flying to only has a NDB approach, that's one thing, but I've never heard of ATC telling a pilot what kind of approach to fly rather than the approach that the pilot requests.
" Approach, Bonanza 1234, request GPS-35 Centennial"
"Bonanza 1234, Approach, sorry, you've gotta fly the NDB today"
Not.
Gonna.
Happen.
alright, use semantics. glad you used kapa. i've gone in there on the ndb when the loc was down, and we didn't have the raim for the gps. sure they didn't "assign" it, but they did clear us for it.
a loc is just an easier ils. show me the ils, i'll take your word for it on a loc approach. ndb approachs are what many seem to understand the least, so i'd see if you know how to do it.
i don't understand why people are so against doing them. they aren't that accurate, but the mins aren't that low. they aren't difficult to fly, yet everyone complains about them.
Not to argue, but I've never seen both the localizer down, AND no raim for the GPS at the same time at APA.
I get assigned approaches all of the time. I don't know how the fields you fly into work, but the busier one's I fly into tell me what approach to expect. Sometimes I request other approaches- sometimes they give them to me and sometimes they don't. Granted, I don't have to accept any approach clearance I don't want to, but unless I have a good reason, I'll be shooting the approach they want me to. I'm filed /a so they know what approaches I can and cannot shoot.
If everybody requested the approach they would prefer, and were granted that request, it would cripple a lot of airport- especially when calm winds exist making any runway usuable.
I don't think we're talking about quite the same thing. You can be "assigned" which runway to land on based on a lot of factors- but if that runway has multiple approaches ( ILS, GPS, VOR, NDB) ATC is not going to require you to use the NDB or VOR if the ILS is working (unless your equipment isn't working, in which case you'd inform them of the problem anyway)