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What will they be saying?
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Well, probably something along the lines of, "yo, why are you going below the GS? You were cleared for an ILS to a runway with a functioning GS."
Not that I would know from an experience during my instructing days, or anything.
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If you are flying an ILS lets say the Redding RDD ILS 34 and the glideslope is out of service, then what happens is that you cleared for the "RDD ILS 34 localizer only approach". When this happens to us in "real world/IMC", often the controllers simply said "cleared for the RDD ILS 34 approach." Its up to US to know that the GS is out based on ATIS and NOTAM. In FACT, there have been times that the Center controller might not even know about this!!
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Yeah, I know, but Dazzler (if I'm not mistaken), was talking about doing a LOC approach after being cleared for an ILS (assuming a functioning glideslope, I believe he said). I'm just saying, they're two different procedures and should be treated as such, IMO at least. Incidentally, I've never been cleared for an ILS with an inop GS without the controller saying, "N1234, cleared ILS, GS out, runway 36."
MikeD....what say you?
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and EatSleep... hows freight going so far?
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It's awesome, I love it. Can't see myself doing anything else right now. Had a fun night Friday night, flew all night in ice, snow, rain, fog, and thunderstorms with a broken autopilot. Did 4 approaches, all down close to mins except the first one. Last approach of the trip (at my alternate, couldn't get into home), at 3am Saturday morning, had to hand-fly an ILS and it was VV001 with 1/2 sm vis in rain and mist. That's the first time that I for real saw the approach lights and had to go down to 100' above TDZE before I could see the threshold. Wooo!
I couldn't believe I got in. I was was planning on having to retreat to a second alternate that I had in mind because they had better weather and I didn't have enough fuel to shoot approaches all night.