Haisam Mohamed El Sayed
New Member
which abbreviated as MVA
:yeahthat:So ya don't hit stuff!
Do not hit the ground or anything attached to it.
i do not love to hit anything
Do not hit the ground or anything attached to it.
Minimum vectoring altitude is the lowest altitude a controller can assign while giving an aircraft radar vectors. Note the word "assign," as it does not mean that I can't vector you below the MVA; it just means I can't assign you to an altitude below the MVA and vector you. Thus, if you're VFR and below the MVA when you call a radar controller, the controller will gladly vector you because the altitude was not assigned.
Exceptions to the MVA rule include PAR and emergencies. In the case of the latter, we fall back on what we call an EOVM (Emergency Obstruction Vectoring Map) which displays altitudes 200 feet above known and mapped obstructions. Surveillance approaches are not exempted because the controller will not assign an altitude on such an approach. Instead, they will instruct the pilot to, "Descend to your minimum descent altitude," and if you ask for altitudes the controller will only "recommend" altitudes in increments of one nautical mile to a point that is above the lowest MDA for the approach.
They sorta did one at Moisant Field with a United Airbus a week or so ago.
PARs and Surveillance Approaches you definitely are retired! (Although we did them all the time in the Marines and they still do them in certain places with regularity)
Actually, El Paso Approach still do ASRs into both El Paso Int'l and Biggs AAF. So, I'm not as retired as you may think. As for PARs, I did those when I was in the USAF at Davis-Monthan. They still have PAR there; the scopes are located in the Tucson TRACON, which is physically located on Davis-Monthan.