Actually, most Airlines are not completely GPS.
They use to of used an inertial navigation system, atleast, the planes I'm familiar with. Three gyros, one in each axis, with sophisticaed instrumentation to measure the precession of each gyro as it is moved, and to use that data to calculate velocity and heading relative to a starting point (the point of initilization).
INS were later improved with (laser ring) gyros with no moving parts (AHRS - Attitude and Heading Reference System). They, as in the early B757 and B767, the laser ring units were fed updates from, IGS, VOR and TACAN (the DME portion) data for a more accurate self-updating system. Lastly, GPS is now (primarily) used in most jets depending on the airline(r) and whether they've retrofitted their fleet. So, it will make no difference if GPS fails, or if a bunch of Navaids fail. The only use I can see of not navigating by this is if you're flying into an airport that isn't in the nav database or you simply cannot mess with the CDU due to various situations.
You mentioned you use the A340.... well the CLS A340 atleast, uses the default (GPS) planner instead of modelling its AHRS and FMC. That's semi-realistic, but in real life it's not as simple as only GPS.
And lastly, ILS is always used for precision landings. GPS updates are still no where near accurate enough.
http://www.boeing.com/commercial/caft/r ... 757767.pdf
EDIT: And any pilot who cannot navigate by VOR is probably retarded.
EDIT2: Corrected faults.
Last edited by Slotback on Fri Nov 30, 2007 11:29 am, edited 1 time in total.