That said, stop doing RNP if you’re unable RNP.
Hard to stop when it appears a large section of the aviation public doesn't understand the difference between vanilla GPS and RNP...
RNP .3 et al has more to do with fault earning and alerting than it does with accuracy levels.
RNP 10: your system doesn’t have to tell you that the system has degraded
RNP 4 and lower: there has to a warning that tells the pilot the box/system is no longer capable of the required RNP level.
So for shooting a RNP AR approach, you want the box to scream at you if the accuracy is degraded because that RNP number is what is keeping you away from the Cumulus Granite.
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I don't know what you guys are and are not authorized to do. If you can't, it's your responsibility to say unable.
ATC has no idea what approaches you are or are not authorized for. If you ask for the LDA-Z or the RNP 33 that's what they'll clear you for.Is any effort made to enforce a carrier-specific procedure? I have heard that in Alaska if you are knowledgeable enough to ask for a special approach clearance you are likely to get it.
ATC has no idea what approaches you are or are not authorized for. If you ask for the LDA-Z or the RNP 33 that's what they'll clear you for.
Yes, I understand that ATC has no responsibility to figure out what I'm authorized for.
What I'm trying to ask is how ATC will respond in the isolated case they know I'm not authorized.
ATC does not have the authority to deny you an approach, even if we know you're not authorized to attempt it. For instance, an approach with weather below minimums; that's a pilot's call, not ours.
Honest question, outside of 121, if an approach is in the data base is there anything that would alert the crew that they aren't authorized to use it? Is it something that's covered in 135 check ride training for each operator/aircraft? What about 91 guys with an FMS, how would they know?Thanks for the clarification.
Yes, I understand that ATC has no responsibility to figure out what I'm authorized for.
What I'm trying to ask is how ATC will respond in the isolated case they know I'm not authorized.
ATC does not have the authority to deny you an approach, even if we know you're not authorized to attempt it. For instance, an approach with weather below minimums; that's a pilot's call, not ours.
I thought you couldn’t clear a part 135 or 121 flight for an approach where visibility is below minimums?
I thought you couldn’t clear a part 135 or 121 flight for an approach where visibility is below minimums?
Back in the day when ASAs E120s could only go down to 1800RVR, Delta would be flying CATIIs to 1600-1200 RVR in Atlanta. As we would be driving up to the final approach fix, RVR would suddenly be “reporting” 1800, then would be back down to 1600 for the following Delta.
Funny how that worked out. First 1600 RVR approach at SJI, the captain asked me what I thought of it. “Eh, looked like 1800 to me.”