by Brett_Henderson » Mon Dec 29, 2008 9:25 pm
This is gooood stuff (and inspiring me to get busy on the IFR lessons)..
You guys have covered non-precision approaches pretty well.. so there's not much to add... Other than the obvious.. that a non-precision approach would have a higher MDA.. an under real world conditions (if you obey minimums), you catch sight of the runway, well before getting into trouble.
The interesting thing that's rarely talked about, on step-down descents, is that you do not have maintain a constant glide-path. It certainly makes it easier and safer (because it requires a stabilized approach), but as soon as you pass any of the, "descend no lower before" fixes..you can dive to the next altitude, and then fly level, waiting on the next.
The only reason I bring this up, is that in the common IFR training aircraft, you're talking about something pretty small and slow (and forgiving). It's not so much that you end up descending early on purpose, but it's more like a learned response. I'll promise you, that the first time you shoot n NDB approach (if the CFI lets you lern by making a mistake), you'll come in high... VERY high. After a couple of those, you'll find yourself rushing the descent.. and you kinda learn by reward that it's not a bad way to fly the approach (in a FORGIVING, slow airplane). You're not only down to DH sooner.. you get stable there, and the likelyhood of accidentally dropping too low is lessened.
As for no glideslope.. I'd almost rather have a DME. Obvioulsy BOTH would be better.. but of the two.. I've found that chasing a needle is more problematic than just establishing a stabilized approach, and then referencing your agl by DME... because by non-precision minimums, you won't be cutting it that close, anyway.
Today though.. even a lowly, rental C172 is likely to be GPS equiped. GPS approaches take all the "fun" out of it.. Our club has two Warriors, and one Skyhawk with Garmin 430s installed.. and they're all WAAS capable .. pretty much a precision approach for ever runway in the world 8-)