by beaky » Thu Oct 13, 2005 4:02 pm
It does depend on the aircraft, but there are two ways to figure this out...
First way: do the math. You should know how many feet from your pattern or cruise altitude you need to lose to reach the runway (your altitude minus the airport elevation), how many feet per minute you're descending (as shown by the VSI), and how many horizontal miles you're covering per minute while descending (groundspeed), so it's not that complicated. Divide the altitude you need to lose by the number of fpm you are descending, then multiply that number by the number of miles per minute. For example:
You want to go straight-in from 3000 feet to a 500-foot elevation runway. Let's say your airplane's nominal approach configuration puts you at 500 fpm with 80 knots indicated...
You need to lose 2500 feet, and the airplane will need 5 minutes to do that at 500fpm. Your airspeed is 80 knots (works for an estimate, but of course wind will reduce your actual groundspeed); that's 1.3 miles per minute (80 divided by 60)... so if you want to go from 3000 to 500 at 500fpm and 80 kts, you have to start 6.5 nautical miles out (1.3 X 5 =6.5). All of these numbers will of course vary depending on the airplane, wind, etc., etc.
It should be noted that for my RL (light piston) flights, this is precisely how (before I fly) I figure out where to start descending to enter the pattern at the right spot. I work it backwards to figure out where I'll reach the top of climb after takeoff. Even without factoring in the wind, this method works pretty well in RL and the sim.
Second way(easier, sort of, but more time-consuming): fly an aproach to a runway with ILS or VASI/PAPI. You can determine your distance from the runway at the moment you hit the glideslope at your desired altitude by using GPS, DME, or if at an uncontrolled airport, selecting "report position" from the ATC list. This doesn't help you much with planning descents from different altitudes, unless you figure out the ratio of horizontal feet to vertical feet then apply that to all situations.... but if you have no idea what airspeed/vertical speed you're supposed to have, this'll tell you.
Of course, if the runway's in sight, even without glideslope and performance information, all you have to do is descend in such a way that the runway doesn't move up or down in your field of vision- it should just get bigger. If it looks like you started decending too far out, just climb a little and try again. If you're too close and the runway's slipping under the nose, go around and try again.
Last edited by
beaky on Thu Oct 13, 2005 4:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.