Use the radar altimeter for altitudes!
I love being able to pull up metars.Same way I always do-dial up a text METAR on the Chelton.
Use the one you got on your preflight.Since you need to be at a certain altitude to shoot the approach, and you don't want to be below the approach altitudes specially in a mountainous area. How would you get an altimeter settings in IFR lost COMM situation?
Use my cell phone and look it up on Foreflight.
Worst case scenario just set the field elevation...
I'm thinking if you can listen to a VOR, or even NDB for that matter, you could listen to the ASOS/ATIS.While airborne...
Find one nearby that transmits on equipment you can receive on, IE a VOR or NDB.
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This. Problem solved. If you're flying for a long enough time and distance that may not be valid any more chances are very high you have a radar altimeter.Use the one you got on your preflight.
...which you wouldn't be using for this situation anyway.This. Problem solved. If you're flying for a long enough time and distance that may not be valid any more chances are very high you have a radar altimeter.
For no VHF coms in IMC, approach to mins? I'd certainly set DH....which you wouldn't be using for this situation anyway.![]()
Something more original (usually, anyway) than "Two nine, nine two."What's an altimeter setting?