Circling Approach. ??
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Falls Church
Age: 78
Posts: 21
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Old fart talking here, so listen up
In the good old days, circling was fun, easily doable with fairly experienced skippers and f/os and nice cockpit gauges which allowed good crosschecks as both pilots alternated looking in and out. Even with the PM straining to look out monitoring the visual cues, obstacles, etc the layout of those old steam gauges allowed his peripheral vision to monitor engine/flight instrumentations with relative ease. Try doing that in today's CRT/LED displays...not that easy.
In times past, pilots get a real feel of the performance of the aircraft through good " endorsement training " with many takeoffs/landings, touch n gos in a real physical environment; now with this ZFT sim training thingy, endorsement training is a joke.
The circling involves full hands on flying for the PF with full concentration on the flight path, profile and performance management by feel, good eyeballing and of course, experience. The PM monitors both visually and through the instruments, helping to navigate if need to without being distracted with all the manipulating of dials, heading updates, etc as they now practise in the sim.
Different world out there today; so maybe circling may be done away with in the not too distant future!
In the good old days, circling was fun, easily doable with fairly experienced skippers and f/os and nice cockpit gauges which allowed good crosschecks as both pilots alternated looking in and out. Even with the PM straining to look out monitoring the visual cues, obstacles, etc the layout of those old steam gauges allowed his peripheral vision to monitor engine/flight instrumentations with relative ease. Try doing that in today's CRT/LED displays...not that easy.
In times past, pilots get a real feel of the performance of the aircraft through good " endorsement training " with many takeoffs/landings, touch n gos in a real physical environment; now with this ZFT sim training thingy, endorsement training is a joke.
The circling involves full hands on flying for the PF with full concentration on the flight path, profile and performance management by feel, good eyeballing and of course, experience. The PM monitors both visually and through the instruments, helping to navigate if need to without being distracted with all the manipulating of dials, heading updates, etc as they now practise in the sim.
Different world out there today; so maybe circling may be done away with in the not too distant future!
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Where You Aren't
Posts: 506
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Gleneagles,
Right, we need to now make sure that as we roll out on final on visual approach that the heading bug on the EFIS is set to runway heading! Miss that and you fail your command course!
Right, we need to now make sure that as we roll out on final on visual approach that the heading bug on the EFIS is set to runway heading! Miss that and you fail your command course!
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Yellow Brick Road
Posts: 1,127
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
You know, the visual procedure that you perform with reference to ... instruments.
Join Date: May 2004
Location: 3.5 from TD
Age: 47
Posts: 1,042
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Edit: Sorry, wrong guy, I was thinking of a different video. This video is actually quite good and could certainly benefit the Cathay training culture. Our way of fixing all the problems with visual approaches was ...
... increase the automation and increase your tasks, like messing around with stop watches and building a visual approach in the FMC.
... increase the automation and increase your tasks, like messing around with stop watches and building a visual approach in the FMC.
Last edited by Sqwak7700; 18th Mar 2012 at 06:48.
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Asia
Posts: 161
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Circling at Kemayoran, Djakarta.
gleneagles is correct about round instruments making it easier to circle in IFR-VFR conditions. Back in the late 1970s Cathay operated a night arrival into Kemayoran which was the main airport for Djakarta. If a north wind was blowing it required running down RW18 ILS to 1000 feet and then breaking 45 degrees left, glancing at the second hand of the clock and heading out into the pitch black darkness of rural Indonesia. Sighting the dimly lit airport terminal building when half way around the turnback was the time to start breathing again and if the VARSI came up with the correct colours then all was well. Great sense of satisfaction from this one, sadly never to be experienced by todays operators.
Oval3Holer;
There are times when messing about with heading bugs and other so called aids is akin to puting legs on a snake.
O.P.
Oval3Holer;
There are times when messing about with heading bugs and other so called aids is akin to puting legs on a snake.
O.P.
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: VHHH
Posts: 94
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Although posted with good intentions, please save us from YouTube video lectures by some self-help preacher type, prancing around a stage in a heavily starched, creases ironed shirt, complete with designer tie and Cross pen in pocket, waving his arms in the air, laboriously telling us of the dangers of automation dependancy. We already know.
Just make sure these young, spotty faced First Officers can fly a raw data NDB approach, miss and hold, and your “automation dependency” worries will be over. And yes, I am an old fart, but never scratched an aeroplane, or even an air-plane.
No wonder T&C's are spiraling downward. The skill set and level of competency that I had to demonstrate 20 years ago is being dumbed down, so that an airline pilot can be trained easily and without any need for solid experience.
What is with Cathay? I have seen your SOPS by proxy, and thankfully, many of them have been binned at KA. No raw data flying, no high speed descent, Cat D circling at a 1000 feet ( which you are now getting rid of ) and I get told to put extra fuel on by ACARS.
Even worse than having the job dumbed down, is the above empowers an ordinary operator to huff and puff in the LHS, within the boundaries of some pretty numbing SOPS.
Bring back the well managed high speed descent below the MSA; and a glide slope intercept from above isn't sporty if well handled. And who took away the dive from Sierra? Ask me to do a raw data ILS on a line check. And for licensing renewal, have me demonstrate a 500ft single engine circling approach in the simulator. Don't start me on Visual Approaches. Can't do one it should be bye-bye Charlie.
All of these were core competencies just a few years ago! Now that they are not, will make pilot training simple, cheaper and the abandonment of a need for good experience. Hence pay is not going up.
What is with Cathay? I have seen your SOPS by proxy, and thankfully, many of them have been binned at KA. No raw data flying, no high speed descent, Cat D circling at a 1000 feet ( which you are now getting rid of ) and I get told to put extra fuel on by ACARS.
Even worse than having the job dumbed down, is the above empowers an ordinary operator to huff and puff in the LHS, within the boundaries of some pretty numbing SOPS.
Bring back the well managed high speed descent below the MSA; and a glide slope intercept from above isn't sporty if well handled. And who took away the dive from Sierra? Ask me to do a raw data ILS on a line check. And for licensing renewal, have me demonstrate a 500ft single engine circling approach in the simulator. Don't start me on Visual Approaches. Can't do one it should be bye-bye Charlie.
All of these were core competencies just a few years ago! Now that they are not, will make pilot training simple, cheaper and the abandonment of a need for good experience. Hence pay is not going up.
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: hong kong
Posts: 7
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
This is a reflection on what Boeing has always subscribed to: hence the term for their aircraft as being designed to be flown by N and A's.... (i'll leave the translation to others).
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Cupboard
Posts: 264
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Gnad,
You know you're just another airline pilot, right? The fact that cadets can eventually do it, while never having any actual flying experience, is the whole point: If you want to do some challenging flying that requires skill and experience to avoid hitting the ground, where talent and brainpower mean something, go do some soaring or aerobatics or join the air force (but don't fly jet transports) or fly helicopters.
If you want to work in a difficult industry where discipline, knowledge and a bit of experience and training will get a valuable and therefore high-paying job done, and where a single accident can break a company while taking 300-400 people down at the same time, stick with jet transports that come with all the fancy auto-systems for you to monitor, all the dispatch/load control/engineering/operations support, and pat yourself on the back for pulling off yet another easy manual landings at the end....unless the weather is a bit dodgy, then, as per policy, let the autoland take care of that too.
Don't worry, you're still an important (though easily replaceable) employee, but you're not that special, and if a 23-yr-old, 200-hr SO can do it, so can you. Before you argue about all that amazing "commanding" you do, pick up any book on leadership to find out just how little leading and commanding you do, unless you're one of the 10% that actually knows the difference between leadership/commanding and pretending to lead/command while simply being good at quoting manuals.
Have a nice day!
You know you're just another airline pilot, right? The fact that cadets can eventually do it, while never having any actual flying experience, is the whole point: If you want to do some challenging flying that requires skill and experience to avoid hitting the ground, where talent and brainpower mean something, go do some soaring or aerobatics or join the air force (but don't fly jet transports) or fly helicopters.
If you want to work in a difficult industry where discipline, knowledge and a bit of experience and training will get a valuable and therefore high-paying job done, and where a single accident can break a company while taking 300-400 people down at the same time, stick with jet transports that come with all the fancy auto-systems for you to monitor, all the dispatch/load control/engineering/operations support, and pat yourself on the back for pulling off yet another easy manual landings at the end....unless the weather is a bit dodgy, then, as per policy, let the autoland take care of that too.
Don't worry, you're still an important (though easily replaceable) employee, but you're not that special, and if a 23-yr-old, 200-hr SO can do it, so can you. Before you argue about all that amazing "commanding" you do, pick up any book on leadership to find out just how little leading and commanding you do, unless you're one of the 10% that actually knows the difference between leadership/commanding and pretending to lead/command while simply being good at quoting manuals.
Have a nice day!
Iron Skillet
Of course a high percentage of cadets will be able to do it and that's the crux of my argument. The job has been made inefficient and is being continually dumbed down. From my observations, there are two streams of training too. We are not quite there with your suggestion that cadet pilots are anywhere near the same level of proficiency as experienced pilots.Yes, they are coming up to the mark quickly, because they don't have the same set of core skills as yesteryear.
You seem to infer I have concerns about my own professional importance. No, I don't. Frankly, the situation is nicely balanced. Sure, I don't have worry about demonstrating the skills I did 20 years ago which makes proficiency and professional standards riddled with complacency. The other side of the scale being my easy replacement and lack of wage growth due the supply and demand being met with cadets.
Your belittling descriptors of the airline pilot are a few years away yet. No circling bringing it a few years closer. Just cross off visual approaches and that will help. Raw data proficiency has long gone by accounts. Dragging your ass in seems common too- I thought you add three thousand to that FMGC profile.
Of course a high percentage of cadets will be able to do it and that's the crux of my argument. The job has been made inefficient and is being continually dumbed down. From my observations, there are two streams of training too. We are not quite there with your suggestion that cadet pilots are anywhere near the same level of proficiency as experienced pilots.Yes, they are coming up to the mark quickly, because they don't have the same set of core skills as yesteryear.
You seem to infer I have concerns about my own professional importance. No, I don't. Frankly, the situation is nicely balanced. Sure, I don't have worry about demonstrating the skills I did 20 years ago which makes proficiency and professional standards riddled with complacency. The other side of the scale being my easy replacement and lack of wage growth due the supply and demand being met with cadets.
Your belittling descriptors of the airline pilot are a few years away yet. No circling bringing it a few years closer. Just cross off visual approaches and that will help. Raw data proficiency has long gone by accounts. Dragging your ass in seems common too- I thought you add three thousand to that FMGC profile.
No Bucks, no Buck Rogers......
The days of CX being a smallish Airline with highly experienced drivers that fly like Chuck Yeager has long gone. We are scraping the bottom of the barrell now days and CX is forced to dumb it down in order to compensate.
The reasons are obvious and you don't need to be a Rocket Scientist ( or Buck Rogers!! ) to see it.
As for no NDB approaches and no Circling?? Good riddance, much safer RNAV's available.
However I do think we should maintain the ability to fly raw data and visual circuits. Aren't the 'N' sim sessions designed to address such areas?
The days of CX being a smallish Airline with highly experienced drivers that fly like Chuck Yeager has long gone. We are scraping the bottom of the barrell now days and CX is forced to dumb it down in order to compensate.
The reasons are obvious and you don't need to be a Rocket Scientist ( or Buck Rogers!! ) to see it.
As for no NDB approaches and no Circling?? Good riddance, much safer RNAV's available.
However I do think we should maintain the ability to fly raw data and visual circuits. Aren't the 'N' sim sessions designed to address such areas?
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Not in a Bus
Posts: 325
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
So..... a quick aside....
Anyone else noted that the subset of guys who bitch about the VNAV being rubbish, the On Approach logic being wrong, the procedures always changing and generally derisive about anything with the letters PRNAVGNASSANP (etc) in, almost always exclude the subset of hardworking junior guys (esp' Cadets) and almost completely belong inside (not wholly including) the subset of guys who wax lyrical about former glories - ALL THE TIME! You know who you are....
(Breathe mate .... Breathe, or maybe punctuate next time)
Oh and BTW, absolutely not agin' story time, got a few myself, they are fun between the right mates but irrelevant to today's job, get over it. (And maybe if you're gonna publish one, come up with something better than basically a visual circuit)
Anyone else noted that the subset of guys who bitch about the VNAV being rubbish, the On Approach logic being wrong, the procedures always changing and generally derisive about anything with the letters PRNAVGNASSANP (etc) in, almost always exclude the subset of hardworking junior guys (esp' Cadets) and almost completely belong inside (not wholly including) the subset of guys who wax lyrical about former glories - ALL THE TIME! You know who you are....
(Breathe mate .... Breathe, or maybe punctuate next time)
Oh and BTW, absolutely not agin' story time, got a few myself, they are fun between the right mates but irrelevant to today's job, get over it. (And maybe if you're gonna publish one, come up with something better than basically a visual circuit)
Join Date: Jan 2000
Posts: 56
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Gnadenburg
There are old pilots and bold pilots but not many old bold pilots.
This attitude was fine in your 402 doing them on a regular basis, but the fact is we don't do them any more, so the occasional one in the sim is not enough to send my family off with you to practice one for real.
There are old pilots and bold pilots but not many old bold pilots.
This attitude was fine in your 402 doing them on a regular basis, but the fact is we don't do them any more, so the occasional one in the sim is not enough to send my family off with you to practice one for real.
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Planet Earth
Posts: 672
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Actually according to the article in Crews News, it says we are not to do circling approaches but that any manouvreing in future will be done as a visual approach. So effectively can't we basically do the same manouvre anyway but just call it a visual approach? Albeit with the 5000M viz required instead of the 4600M.
Join Date: Feb 1999
Location: Nirvana
Posts: 472
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Missing the point perhaps?
Some of you are waffling on about experience, qualifications, good ole days, but this issue came to ahead because of one of the ole timer Trainer/checker plucked up on the circling approach becoming unstable. His dysfunctional bipolar personality got the better of him no doubt. Pot to Kettle, come in please!