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Gold Coast needs an ILS

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Old 9th Feb 2014, 09:37
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Today's press say the ILS is another year away
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Old 9th Feb 2014, 10:58
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Up the coast a bit, the GLA 10 ILS is in and being tested.
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Old 9th Feb 2014, 15:29
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Who paid for that? Santos? To ensure their workers get in...
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Old 10th Feb 2014, 03:22
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Sounds like the NIMBY's are at it again with the local members voicing opposition.

Are the A330's not able to do the RNP?

Given the Coast's population, tourism dependance, and the difficulties just getting a basic ILS installed, is it time to build a proper airport somewhere else?

LONG-suffering airline passengers and pilots are facing more further potentially dangerous delays in getting an all-weather landing system at Gold Coast Airport.

Flights into Coolangatta are diverted to Brisbane in bad weather because of the lack of an Instrument Landing System (ILS) which allows pilots to land aircraft safely.

The absence of an ILS has become an embarrassment for Australia's sixth busiest airport, especially because small regional airports including such as Proserpine, Mildura and Wagga Wagga already have the system.


Last month, plane-load of Japanese tourists and returning Australians holidaymakers due fly in to in Coolangatta at 6.25am did not arrive until 3pm because their Jetstar flight was diverted to Brisbane.

"It's a total debacle,'' one passenger fumed at the time.

The former federal Labor government pledged $10 million to install the ILS and the Abbott Government has committed to the project but sources told The Sunday Mail said the system was now unlikely to be in place until the middle of next year.

The latest delay is s are believed to be a result of several factors including have been caused by factors including opposition from central Gold Coast residents who would be in the airport flight path when the ILS is used.

In addition, state MP for Burleigh Michael Hart, a former aircraft engineer, has questioned the effectiveness of the system and Mermaid Beach MP Ray Stevens is lobbying against the flight path on behalf of his constituents.

Southern Gold Coast Chamber of Commerce president Gail O'Neill said the ILS was "long overdue".

"It's very disappointing to hear of yet another delay. This has been going on for years,'' she said. "We're a tourism town and we should be servicing our tourists. We shouldn't be diverting them to Brisbane and putting them on buses.''

Australian Federation of Air Pilots spokesman Simon Lutton said pilots wanted safety improvements at Gold Coast.

"Any upgrade or improvements to navigation aids and resources would certainly be welcomed by pilots,'' he said.
A THREE-year campaign to bring a $10 million instrument landing system to the Gold Coast could be derailed by some of the city's richest residents who don't want planes flying over their houses for just 60 days of the year.

The ILS will allow planes to land in all weather conditions and fly as low as 60m.

The proposed ILS flight path would take planes over Southport, Surfers Paradise, Broadbeach and Mermaid Beach and is expected to be used for five per cent of landings in low-visibility situations.

More than $10 million was committed to the project by the former Labor government in May after years of lobbying and a growing number of Gold Coast bound flights being delayed each December and January.

However, some Mermaid Beach residents and politicians don't want it at all.
Mermaid Beach Community Association president Alf Vocker, an LNP member, said he was "utterly opposed" to the plan and would take the matter directly to Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

"Mermaid Beach is a high residential area and the last thing we want is to become another Currumbin," he said.

"Our residents are utterly opposed and we will protest any move to put us under a flight path because we cannot seen any reason for it.

"We have a lot of high-pressure people here as far as the Federal Government is concerned and we will bring the pressure to the MPs themselves including Tony Abbott who I know personally."

Mermaid Beach MP Ray Stevens is leading a campaign against the proposed flight path which crosses through his electorate.

Mr Stevens demanded federal MPs Steven Ciobo and Karen Andrews exert their influence in Canberra to prevent the plan from becoming a reality.

He said the proposed flight path was not suitable given the area's high-density population.

``I will be asking for our MPs to support the limitation of this flight path use to periods of bad weather only rather than all through the year,'' he said.

``It is incumbent upon the federal member to have a pragmatic and reasonable solution for our residents given this is a system which would likely only see use 60 days in a year.

``We must be clear the residents of this area do not want planes going over their houses when it is not necessary.''

LS systems are already installed in capital city airports as well as at Townsville, Wagga Wagga, Launceston and Cairns, all of which bring in fewer aircraft and visitors than Gold Coast, which is the sixth busiest airport in the country.

Community consultation is expected to be held through the Christmas period.

Mr Ciobo has been involved in negotiations and said living under a flight path was one of the realities of living in a city with a growing population,

``It is my understanding that around five per cent of arrivals will actually use the system primarily in low-vision situations,'' he said.

``Frankly this is what happens when you live in a city of more than half a million people and I say that as someone who lives under what will be the flight path.

``We need this system to keep the city growing and continue to be an international destination and I think the impact will barely register.''

The existing flight path is primarily offshore and only crosses the coastline at Currumbin.

Gold Coast Airport boss Paul Donovan said residents would get to have their say.

``It will go out to consultation and everyone will get to see what it is and have their say,'' he said.

``It is a bit early for anyone to comment on the system until after it has gone before the public but ultimately the number of flights which would use it would be minimal.''
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Old 10th Feb 2014, 04:05
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The absence of an ILS has become an embarrassment for Australia's sixth busiest airport, especially because small regional airports including such as Proserpine, Mildura and Wagga Wagga already have the system.
1 out of 3 ain't bad....
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Old 10th Feb 2014, 05:13
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Don't forget Albany...
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Old 10th Feb 2014, 09:50
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Might have to give Jepessen a call tomorrow, I seem to be missing my ILS charts for Mildura and Proserpine.
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Old 10th Feb 2014, 10:10
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Well you won't find them in the Yellow Pages or online if you spell it like that!
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Old 13th Feb 2014, 08:17
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Instrument landing system to be installed at Gold Coast Airport by June 2015 | Gold Coast Bulletin
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Old 13th Feb 2014, 10:10
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As a person close on this project. I'm still not completely convinced it's going to happen.

As the link above says....2 flights all summer have diverted to Brisbane....I'll repeat the number again. ..2. Do you really think the minister is going to give his backing to something that costs so much, yet provides so little?

Consider that public criteria rnp will be available at Gold Coast before the ils is operational. And the emo minima is only about 100-150ft higher than an ils. If those 2 diversions would have arrived off an rnp....well....what's the point.


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Old 13th Feb 2014, 10:12
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.....and if there really is no point. Then you are just stirring up and pissing off the locals for no reason.


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Old 13th Feb 2014, 11:15
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The tailored (private) RNP at Gold Coast has worked fine for years..

Min is higher due to obstacles in the missed...and WAY too much emphasis has been placed on 250 vs 350 HAT of ILS vs RNP.

EDIT: Looking at the public RNP, and the other procedures, I think perhap reviewing the obstacles in the flightpath to get the min down would be much more cost effective.

Last edited by underfire; 13th Feb 2014 at 20:25.
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Old 13th Feb 2014, 11:21
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OOL doesn't really need an ILS...just cOOL and sound approach procedures using GPS/RNP or well constructed VOR approaches.

Many airlines have been flying to Kathmandu using the VOR 02 approach in a more challenging environment lately with nary a problem. I have flown there a couple of times a year and most operators going in there have done so safely and efficiently. Good preparation and focussed flying needed though.

Godspeed and fly safe.
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Old 13th Feb 2014, 19:15
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2 flights all summer have diverted to Brisbane....I'll repeat the number again. ..2.


The financial cost and safety costs to the Airlines and ultimately the travelling public of not having a precision approach aid warrants the installation of an ILS.

Along with your two repeat two flights ;

How many flights have carried significantly more fuel than they should have to out last significant weather conditions?
How many flights have carried out more than one non precision approach to become visual some at night with the tower closed.
How many flights have been cancelled due to the weather forecast/actual conditions not being suitable for a non precision approach.
How many flights have had to use Brisbane alternates further up or down the coast because OOL lacks a precision approach aid?

Someone 'close on the project' should talk to some pilots, some flight planning officers and some Airline executives to see if those "two repeat two" diversions stack up against the safe, efficient, and financially viable expectations that we all have for OOL.

Last edited by ad-astra; 13th Feb 2014 at 19:37.
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Old 14th Feb 2014, 00:48
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So what is the financial and safety cost?

There is no safety cost. There may be a safety benefit. But when the aircraft are getting vertical guidance via RNP, what is the extra safety benefit that an ILS will deliver? There is also an implication that the current procedures are unsafe, I do not agree with this. They may be less efficient.

Financial, I can't argue with that. But you would have to answer the questions below to compare apples with apples.

How many flights have carried significantly more fuel than they should have to out last significant weather conditions?
How many flights have carried out more than one non precision approach to become visual some at night with the tower closed.
How many flights have been cancelled due to the weather forecast/actual conditions not being suitable for a non precision approach.
How many flights have had to use Brisbane alternates further up or down the coast because OOL lacks a precision approach aid?
Can you answer these questions?

Someone 'close on the project' should talk to some pilots, some flight planning officers and some Airline executives to see if those "two repeat two" diversions stack up against the safe, efficient, and financially viable expectations that we all have for OOL.
Why do you assume I haven't? Ad-astra I like the idea of an ILS. So do you it appears. You clearly seem to think that an ILS is essential for Safety and Efficiency at Gold Coast and on face value you are probably right. Currently, the airlines don't support that view. They would rather we develop RNP.
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Old 14th Feb 2014, 02:25
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With the ILS, what would the minima be?

How much less than the current RNP? probably not much with that obstacle rich environment.

The ILS is not going to help very much with the typical ceiling out there.

An RNP turn to 3nm short final would work wonders. (RNP turn in the missed as well)
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Old 14th Feb 2014, 03:48
  #157 (permalink)  
 
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We've been through the RNP thing before on this thread. Too bloody hard unless you've got deep pockets (I wonder how much all the RNPs around Aus have cost QF?). Spread the love, put in a simple, safe ILS that everybody can use.
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Old 14th Feb 2014, 04:03
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The icao rnp coming later this year aren't being designed for or funded by anyone specific. They certainly aren't going to cost 3 mil, and they aren't going to annoy 70000 homes that currently dont have a flightpath overhead.

Win, win situation.


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Old 14th Feb 2014, 04:04
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As the link above says....2 flights all summer have diverted to Brisbane....I'll repeat the number again. ..2. Do you really think the minister is going to give his backing to something that costs so much, yet provides so little
Are you serious?? If that's the thinking in government no wonder the airport is a basket case.

The summer previous they were having days where only a handful of flights landed. BNE was having 60 min traffic holding plus tempos! So we now have to wait for the next spell of wet weather and scheduled chaos, then we can repeat all this line of inquiry all over again?

Love to know what Scoot and Air Asia think of this. Don't think they were too impressed in flying to BNE then chartering buses to OOL.

Bizarre line of thinking for a tourist town.

The ILS is not going to help very much with the typical ceiling out there.
A runway aligned ILS with HIALS will solve everything. Cloud base is not the problem it is heavy rain and the current distance from the threshold you have to start the MAP.

The RNP works but is a extra burden and limits the airport's availability.

Last edited by neville_nobody; 14th Feb 2014 at 04:17.
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Old 14th Feb 2014, 04:31
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They certainly aren't going to cost 3 mil
I wouldn't be at all surprised if the total cost to operators will be in excess of that in terms of aircraft capability management and crew training and currency. RNP-ARs are not a GPS NPA, operational approvals-wise.
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