popaviator
Well-Known Member
When on a non-precision approach do you have to wait to the VDP to descend to the runway if you have it in sight? No right?...just looking for a textbook answer at 12:30 am
irate:
When on a non-precision approach do you have to wait to the VDP to descend to the runway if you have it in sight? No right?...just looking for a textbook answer at 12:30 amirate:
In The Instrument Flight Training Manuel by Peter Dogan it states that the VDP "is defined as the point where a normal 3* approach path to the runway would intersect the MDA...and if you are equipped to identify it, regulations prohibit descending below the MDA before reaching this point."
I have looked through the regs and could not find anything in part 91 that confirms this; the only thing I found was in the AIM 5-4-5 as mentioned above
This is approximately right. 8620.3B has the actual formulas and they can get a little convoluted (big surprise from a TERPs regulation, right?) But basically 3 degrees (or 318'/NM) is what they use if there is no visual glide slope indicator (VASI, PAPI, FLOLS, LCVASI, etc.) If there is a VGSI, then they are supposed to design it so that it is coincident with the glide slope that the VGSI system. So it could be a little bit off of 3 degrees, if say, the PAPI's are 2.75 degrees or whatever.
It could also be designed with a steeper angle if there is no VGSI, but there was an obstacle of some kind in the visual area that penetrated either a 20:1 or a 34:1 descent gradient. In that case, he may have raised the MDA slightly to remove the obstacle, and he may need to move the VDP a little bit closer in (giving a glide slope greater than 3 degrees). But most of the time, it will still be pretty darn close to 3 degrees, if not exactly 3.
And if there's no published VDP, you can (and should, IMO) compute your own.
GuS wears a HAT.![]()
With that caveat that your computed VDP does NOT guarantee that you won't clear any terrain from the MDA to the TDZ!
Exactly...Uh, wut? :dunno:
He's talking about a self-computed VDP, not a published one.Exactly...
VPD does guarantee you will be clear of terrian since you'll be visual.. hence the VISUAL DESCENT POINT.
Unless you're just a plain idiot. (Pun intended)
He's talking about a self-computed VDP, not a published one.
With that caveat that your computed VDP does NOT guarantee that you won't clear any terrain from the MDA to the TDZ!
True, if you're computing a 2 degree or less GP for yourself. But one can easily see if their computed 3 or 4 degree (or even two degree) descent rate can (and should) clear any obstacles from MDA to TDZ. If not, then there's a TERPs problem with the IAP and it likely shouldn't have any straight-in minima to begin with.
Unless something has changed fairly recently, that's incorrect. Absent a published VDP there is no guarantee at all from the MDA to the TDZ. You are supposed to see and avoid. Of course, you are correct for MOST of the time, and if there is a VASI or similar, or the runway is served by a precision approach.
Thats what I said (or meant). With the VDP being the point where a visual descent is made, then there should be no problem with avoiding obstacles. What that self-computed VDP gives you, is moreso a point in space to realize that past it, the chances of (if IMC) now visually acquiring the runway and still being in a normal position to descend and land, are likely now past. The self-computed VDP is a great reference for this. For most 3-4 degree GPs, it also is a useful reference for obstacle and terrain avoidance, however computing a shallow 2 degrees or so VDP, could potentially have you dragging through obstacles that you might not see, or having to dodge the ones you do see.
I think its possible to even have obstacle issues on some approaches even using a 3-4 degree glideslope for your VDP computation.