Exactly why you brief it well before hand. Because to go missed in the conditions I've presented, to me anyway, seems like piss poor planning on the part of a couple of professional pilots.
You wouldn't agree?
+1 to ATN. I wouldn't agree at all. It's probably fine in piston single land. There just isn't much time to address the nav and flight mode changes at 1100' with an approach speed of 130-150 knots.
+1 to ATN. I wouldn't agree at all. It's probably fine in piston single land. There just isn't much time to address the nav and flight mode changes at 1100' with an approach speed of 130-150 knots.
What does it hurt to go missed in your scenario? Just go around, and come back around and set up for the loc, or better yet, set up for the LPV to the same runway, and have a nice, stabilized, obstacle free glide path all the way down. If you don't have the fuel, that's one thing, but even so, the old "plan the flight, fly the plan" has always been something I've found has helped me out. I've found I've never been so close to hitting mountains as the times where I was complacent in my planning duties, or I've changed the plan at the last minute.
If you lose your glideslope at 800'MSL on this approach (http://155.178.201.160/d-tpp/1211/06053ILDZ11.PDF) what do you think you should do? Go back up to 900? Level off below mins? Just go missed? Just go missed, it's easier.
These approaches have low ILS mins, but fairly high LOC mins, I'm sure there are many more out there, these were two that I just thought of off the top of my head.
http://155.178.201.160/d-tpp/1211/00330IL10R.PDF (without JADNU)
http://155.178.201.160/d-tpp/1211/00106IL31L.PDF
I'm not sure where this go-around hesitancy is coming from. You're presented with a situation where the plan has changed. What you've briefed as Plan A is no longer an option. You're a few hundred feet above terrain and descending at a rate of 800 fpm at a speed of 140 knots. And you believe the most prudent course of action is to continue on an approach that hadn't been planned? Sorry, but I think that's reckless. Is it dangerous? Probably not. But it certainly isn't the safest course of action, and you have nothing to prove, so there's no reason to do it when a go-around is always a safe option.
Um, I did at with an approach speed of 200 knots, in on of the most aurmoated planes there is. It's not rocket science, people. And it's not inherently unsafe. It only becomes risky if one doesn't brief it beforehand, or tries to do it on the fly. Remember, the military teaches it this way. I certainly don't think that as risk-averse as they are with their stateside flying, that this would be getting trained if it were indeed unsafe. And this goes for everything from T-38s to C-141s. Size and type of aircraft doesn't make a difference. Planning, briefing and preparing for it does.
Sorry, but I don't want to be evaluating where I am in relation to the MDA of an approach that I wasn't shooting while inside the FAF. Again, just not the prudent course of action. A missed approach is the safest choice. Come back around, properly brief another approach, preferably an RNAV/VNAV approach, and execute the approach as briefed and planned instead of trying to switch things up in the middle of an approach. Again, there's nothing to prove here. No reason to not take the more cautious approach.
Ok, so, you lose glideslope at 600' at 200KIAS, you're 3 degree glideslope rate of descent is about what? About 1000fpm? If LOC mins are 400' you have 12 seconds to, A - decide you actually lost the glideslope if it was ambiguous, B - remember now that you have a different altitude to level off at, C- either handfly and manually level off - if you lead your altitude by 10% you're down to 6 seconds to initiate some sort of change - or reprogram the FMS. If you screw up, you're going to blow through MDA during the level off and have to go missed. I don't know what the automation was like, but I imagine that if you're on a coupled ILS at 200KIAS and you lose glideslope, the automation probably clicks off, you get a chime, and now you're hand flying. It's probably going to be a surprise (unless you're on your checkride) because even if you briefed it you probably weren't expecting it. You have a lot going on in a short period of time and it's probably better to just cob it and go around in my opinion. Approach Landing type accidents, where the airplane comes up short, or gets unstable and ends up overshooting are really common. It's not that it's inherently "unsafe" to transition, it is just that, in "my" opinion, the safer course of action is to abandon the approach and start over.
If the WX has bad elements to it, why would you want to climb back into it and remain there if there wasn't something forcing you to?
Asked and answered earlier in the thread, if you go back and look. Once you're below the LOC MDA, you don't climb back up to it if you lose your GS, because the opportunity to do that has passed already. Below the LOC mins, you're committed to the ILS and are either going to land or go missed.
Well......that's a toughy, but usually, that's not the case. But like I said, I've been known to brief the LOC mins when the weather sucks or Single Engine, but even then, if I have the performance for it, and the airplane isn't equipped with autofeather, I may say "the hell with it" and go missed rather than fly an approach that's all "goat fornicated."
Really, the only reason I have to "not want to go back through it" is ice, and even with that, that's kind of a situation-dependent scenario. While there are absolutely no absolutes in aviation ( ;-) ), I think it's fair to suggest that switching approaches midway through the approach is not a good idea for me. You may be totally fine with it, and that's your prerogative, but personally, I'd prefer to go missed. Now, if I go to work someplace that has a hard-on for "starting the clock" and planning on making it in with a busted GS, then I'll follow their procedures, but in practice - I've found that if I'm "making it work," I'm usually about to make a decision I may regret.
As for the other part, I must have missed that, so disregard that commentary.
Again, there are USAF C-130s doing it. The AF isn't going to be teaching instrument procedures that are reckless.
Let me ask everyone this: For those who have flown radar GCA approaches. Ive been on a few PARs coming down the glidepath where the GCA controller has said during the talkdown "Ghost 7, glideslope went down, you're on course, MDA now 1,100'..... this will be azimuth only, continue descent......slightly right of course and correcting, turn left heading 285...yada, yada, yada..."
Now, I was initially flying a PAR approach. Should I have told the controller I desire to go missed and begin executing my verbal climbout instructions, because the approach "changed"? How would I even know where to go, since my climbout is from the MAP? Or was I reckless to continue with the talkdown and transition to an azimuth-only PAR?
Of course I agree, if the IAP is already "goat fornicated", why press it with an emergency occurring. If you feel comfortable taking it missed and have the performance to do so, or are having any trouble with or getting behind the plane...then I agree, getting away from the ground and obstacles is very wise and prudent. Thats why I say that doing this is situationally dependant on a number of factors. In some cases, it could be dangerous, in other cases it can be very routine.
There's smart making it work, and there's dumb making it work. Like you said, situation-dependant usually separates the two concepts. WX-wise scenario, ice was always a biggie for me, not only for airframe (as there wasn't any boots or surface heat on the jets....and the boots on the old cargo 135 birds I flew worked or they didn't), but moreso engines and FOD. Ice will literally destroy some of the jet engines out there on the fighter-types and even the airliners. Don't believe me? Just ask the crew of Southern Airways 242 who had to land their DC-9 on a highway after hail/ice FODd out both their engines and shattered their windscreen in 1977. Obviously that's an extreme example, but in a moderate and higher icing condition, it's just not something I'd be wanting to screw with and climb back into IF I could safely avoid it.
That's what Im not getting.....in terms of the "unsafe" standpoint......what's there to "evaluate"? One number that constitutes an MDA? That takes some sort of mental gymnastics that I don't know about in 25 years of flying IFR?
Saying that the Air Force does it isn't really going to convince me. This is an airline environment. We look at things differently.
Unless it was an emergency, I wouldn't be conducting a radar approach with passengers on board. If every approach at an airport goes down for some reason, I'm diverting to an airport that is functioning. I've never done a radar approach in my life, and I don't intend for the first time to be with a bunch of people in the back unless the airplane is about to come out of the sky.
It's not "mental gymnastics," but it is a change in the plan at a critical phase of flight. Not a good idea. Fly what you brief, and don't brief things that you aren't going to be doing. That's just standard airline procedure. If I'm doing an ILS, I brief an ILS. If I'm doing a LOC, I brief a LOC. If I'm doing a visual, I brief a visual. I don't brief multiple approaches. We brief what we're going to do, and if circumstances change and we have to do something different, we get up to a safe altitude and properly plan for the new situation.
Um, I did at with an approach speed of 200 knots, in one of the most aurmoated planes there is, as I was trained. It's not rocket science, people. And it's not inherently unsafe. It only becomes risky if one doesn't brief it beforehand, or tries to do it on the fly. Remember, the military teaches it this way. I certainly don't think that as risk-averse as they are with their stateside flying, that this would be getting trained if it were indeed unsafe. And this goes for everything from T-38s to C-141s. Size and type of aircraft doesn't make a difference. Planning, briefing and preparing for it does.