You sound like the old geezers from back when the young'ns whose bread and butter were VORs complained about flying the last few four course ranges....Again, a legit excuse, but one which has nothing to do with the main argument. OF COURSE if the particular NDB approach navaid is bad, then don't use it. But that doesn't mean that every NDB is a completely inaccurate POS. NDB approaches are a great skill builder to have and are a great SA as well as instrument pilot skills honing tool. Why so many people want to mindlessly follow some magenta line all the time, something that takes nearly zero skill, is perplexing. No one wants a challenge, or use of some brain power to think, or a sense of accomplishment anymore, when there is a legitimate chance to be able to do it.
One would think that guys here having to fly an NDB approach, are being asked to perform celestial navigation with a sextant or something.....sheesh
BTDT in actual, minus the GPS. Whats the difficulty and apprehension here even with doing it full panel? I mean, seriously. If the IAP requires NDB only, then fly the damn NDB instead of trying to urgently find every way to avoid it. What the hell have we come to? Is tracking an NDB course inbound or outbound that much of a rocket science maneuver nowdays, that the current crop of GPS-monkeys need to find every way to avoid it in order to keep their heads from exploding, or actually have to use a brain cell to do something more than mindlessly following a magenta line on a screen?
You sound like the old geezers from back when the young'ns whose bread and butter were VORs complained about flying the last few four course ranges....![]()
Ok, fine, I'll get off your lawn!Im just trying to get guys to not be afraid to challenge themselves a bit, with a navaid that's still in active use. Pilots these days are seeming lazy, just wanting to drone from A to B without having to do anything that makes them think a bit or hone their skills a bit, sitting on autopilot and watching the magenta line creep by while they drink their Starbucks. Nothing Im advocating is even remotely rocket science, but guys have gotten this thought in their heads that NDBs are unsafe, or too much work, or takes too much thinking, or requires a bit of multitasking, or whatever.
Challenge yourselves a bit, people. Keep the skills sharp. Because when the day comes when the "magenta crap" goes tits-up in IMC, one doesn't want to end up a smoking hole in the ground because you left your instrument skills back on the ground at your departure airport, years ago. Assuming said pilot ever had them in the first place.....
Still I am new to this game and it may just be my inexperience talking...![]()
One would think that guys here having to fly an NDB approach, are being asked to perform celestial navigation with a sextant or something.....sheesh
Again, a legit excuse, but one which has nothing to do with the main argument. OF COURSE if the particular NDB approach navaid is bad, then don't use it. But that doesn't mean that every NDB is a completely inaccurate POS. NDB approaches are a great skill builder to have and are a great SA as well as instrument pilot skills honing tool. Why so many people want to mindlessly follow some magenta line all the time, something that takes nearly zero skill, is perplexing. No one wants a challenge, or use of some brain power to think, or a sense of accomplishment anymore, when there is a legitimate chance to be able to do it.
One would think that guys here having to fly an NDB approach, are being asked to perform celestial navigation with a sextant or something.....sheesh
You got this part right. And that's not a slam on you at all. You'd be amazed how many newer pilots are intimidated by NDB approaches and have this fear of the unknown. On an NDB, you don't need to be on the final course to the n'th degree or you're going to die, there is some reasonable leeway there in how those IAPs are TERPs, or put together. It's not mind blowing and doesn't require any public math in the cockpit; it's simply interperting what your instruments are telling you. Truthfully, they're one of the easiest IAPs to fly. Courses-TO, bearings-FROM. Head drops to your course inbound, tail rises to your desired bearing outbound.
Also I enjoy doing NDB approaches and NDB holds. It is a bummer that the NDB approach into TTD is almost impossible to execute as it conflicts with PDX traffic. Doing NDB holds with a good amount of wind is a great challenge, one that I practice on the simulator a bunch so if the time comes when ATC instructs me to do so, I will not look like an idiot flying around aimlessly.
I don't think that shooting NDB approaches really makes you that much better of a pilot. I don't think they're any tougher to fly than a VOR approach.
While I think they're better than VORs for en route, I don't particularly see any reason why I wouldn't want to fly the overlay if I could. Something about using "all available resources."
Take a trip to LGD with a /A or /U airplane and trail the AMF airplane going in. You'll get a NDB hold. First time I heard that I was like... um what?Also I enjoy doing NDB approaches and NDB holds. It is a bummer that the NDB approach into TTD is almost impossible to execute as it conflicts with PDX traffic. Doing NDB holds with a good amount of wind is a great challenge, one that I practice on the simulator a bunch so if the time comes when ATC instructs me to do so, I will not look like an idiot flying around aimlessly.
Also I enjoy doing NDB approaches and NDB holds. It is a bummer that the NDB approach into TTD is almost impossible to execute as it conflicts with PDX traffic. Doing NDB holds with a good amount of wind is a great challenge, one that I practice on the simulator a bunch so if the time comes when ATC instructs me to do so, I will not look like an idiot flying around aimlessly.
I think the fear is more of unsats on checkrides. Not actually using them out in the field. I unsat my instrument intermediate stage check twice because the check airman was an idiot. I know I know, defense mechanisms right?
I'm a rockstar at NDBs these days, but my heart rate still goes up when doing them on checkrides because of those unsats 6 years ago. Too subjective to grade, especially if the checkairman goes solely on what he sees outside and doesn't look over to what I'm seeing on the instrument.
Of course it's a defense mechanism, but you also realize that too. Don't let one nitwit checkpilot ruin your confidence. You know what you're capable of.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the FAA have a date that they want to decommission most of the NDBs by?
It's not really a confidence issue now, but I'm more paranoid about NDB approaches/holds than the others.
When it sounds like you have no need to be paranoid. Sounds like you know that you do them fine, and did them fine. The type of Navaid wasn't the problem, the checkpilot seemingly was.