KLB
Well-Known Member
I'll start this off with a story.
I failed a stage check a couple of years ago when I was working on my instrument rating. We were shooting the ILS 34L approach into Greenville Mississippi (GLH) and I had just intercepted glide slope and began my descent down to minimums. I was shooting the perfect ILS approach. I had the perfect wind correction angle to hold me on course and I had the aircraft trimmed perfectly for the the propper descent on the glide slope. As we got closer and closer to minimums I noticed that everything began to look a little to perfect. We were getting to the timed missed approach point and the needle showed know signs of sensitivy. Then I looked and noticed that the number 1 radio was turned off. I told the instructor of the simulated instrument failure and proceeded to go missed. He told me to don't worry about it because I had failed and we were going back to the airport. When we got back and debriefed he explained that I failed because I did not have the final approach course set into the Number two radio and didn't proceed on with the localizer appraoch. I had the Number two radio set up for the missed approach procedure. I felt that this failure was totally bogus but didn't say anything. I continued with my training and got my Instrument ticket.
Now that I am a CFII, I am thinking about how I should teach my students radio set up for the Instrument approaches.
I believe that it is better to have had to missed approach procedure set up in the number two radio rather than be set up for the localizer just in case the number one radio fails.
My reason being that, if you have the number two radio set up for the localizer and you have to go missed, you will most likely be in a climbing turn with your head down looking at frequencies and procedures on the approach plate to set up the missed approach procedures. Which will in turn, make you behind the aircraft. And I believe that is a disaster just waiting to happen. If you actually had a Nav/Comm to fail on you in actual instrument conditions, you should have plenty of fuel in reserve to shoot another approach if you abide by the Regs.
I would really like to hear everyone elses opinion on this topic. How do you like your students to set their Nav/Comms up on approaches?
Thanks in Advance.
I failed a stage check a couple of years ago when I was working on my instrument rating. We were shooting the ILS 34L approach into Greenville Mississippi (GLH) and I had just intercepted glide slope and began my descent down to minimums. I was shooting the perfect ILS approach. I had the perfect wind correction angle to hold me on course and I had the aircraft trimmed perfectly for the the propper descent on the glide slope. As we got closer and closer to minimums I noticed that everything began to look a little to perfect. We were getting to the timed missed approach point and the needle showed know signs of sensitivy. Then I looked and noticed that the number 1 radio was turned off. I told the instructor of the simulated instrument failure and proceeded to go missed. He told me to don't worry about it because I had failed and we were going back to the airport. When we got back and debriefed he explained that I failed because I did not have the final approach course set into the Number two radio and didn't proceed on with the localizer appraoch. I had the Number two radio set up for the missed approach procedure. I felt that this failure was totally bogus but didn't say anything. I continued with my training and got my Instrument ticket.
Now that I am a CFII, I am thinking about how I should teach my students radio set up for the Instrument approaches.
I believe that it is better to have had to missed approach procedure set up in the number two radio rather than be set up for the localizer just in case the number one radio fails.
My reason being that, if you have the number two radio set up for the localizer and you have to go missed, you will most likely be in a climbing turn with your head down looking at frequencies and procedures on the approach plate to set up the missed approach procedures. Which will in turn, make you behind the aircraft. And I believe that is a disaster just waiting to happen. If you actually had a Nav/Comm to fail on you in actual instrument conditions, you should have plenty of fuel in reserve to shoot another approach if you abide by the Regs.
I would really like to hear everyone elses opinion on this topic. How do you like your students to set their Nav/Comms up on approaches?
Thanks in Advance.