Minimum Instruments For IFR/IMC
There are a few of us debating signing up for the Cirrus syndicate operated by Flycummuls.
The breaker looks like the fact that the 20's are not equipped with an ADF. I know that it is not on the minimum equipment list in the US for IFR flying, but I am sure that it is in the UK FIR etc. I seem to remember was a major issue when they first started arriving in Europe. I have searched through LASORS and the CAA website but cannot find anything on this. As IMC capable is a must for us, anybody know the answer and where it is referenced? Thanks |
hi
I have an N registered aircraft without an adf also, I believe it is a requirement in europe to have an ADF to fly IFR legally even though you can manage without it with a GPS |
UK IFR definition
A lot of folk get confused (rightly) by UK IFR definition and requirements. Of course if you mean within Class 'A' airspace then you are talking about the equipment lists as specified in the ANO.
However, the ONLY 'instruments' you need in the UK for IFR in Class 'G' are an altimeter (for telling if you're 1,000' above an obstruction) and a compass (to tell what course you're on with reference to said obstruction) UK IFR definition outside CAS has NOTHING to do with flight 'by sole reference to instruments' as it does elsewhere and you might sensibly think it should here, too. TheOddOne |
Details in the UK AIP, specifically 1.5.3, para 1.2.2.
http://www.nats-uk.ead-it.com/aip/cu...GEN_1_5_en.pdf The document talks about "IFR flight in controlled airspace". I don't see a distinction between A on one side and D-E on the other side, so my guess is that it would be required in B-E too. But I'm not IFR rated and don't fly in the UK all that often, so I might have missed something. |
IFR, in IMC or VMC, is fine with no ADF outside Class A airspace. |
The CAA is consulting on removing the requirement for an ADF for flight in controlled airspace.
It doesn't, however, address the issue of NDB approaches, and approaches for which an NDB forms a fix. |
However, the ONLY 'instruments' you need in the UK for IFR in Class 'G' are an altimeter (for telling if you're 1,000' above an obstruction) and a compass (to tell what course you're on with reference to said obstruction) Firstly, you haven't correctly covered the equipment mandated by Schedule 4 of the ANO for non-public-transport flight OCAS. Perhaps less well known, you also haven't considered the equipment mandated for IFR flight by the 'Kinds of Operations Equipment List' set out in the Limitations Section of the aeroplane's POH. Not that this anything to do with the original poster's query! |
a) The carriage of an ADF is mandatory for IFR in controlled airspace in the UK.
b) The carriage of a DME is mandatory for IFR in practically all of Europe. There are no known prosecutions in the UK, on the above - despite much rumour on pilot forums :) As bookworm suggests, even if a) is removed, a plane without an ADF will still be practically useless for IFR, due to the large number of approaches in UK and abroad which feature an NDB. This leads to an interesting debate whether an ADF should be used for flying these; suprisingly there appears to be no legal requirements for that. I think most smart pilots fly NDB approaches using their GPS (either using the OBS mode, or using the overlay) while checking the ADF at the top of descent. |
TheOddOne, sorry but that's plain wrong! Firstly, you haven't correctly covered the equipment mandated by Schedule 4 of the ANO for non-public-transport flight OCAS. (2) Aeroplanes (a) flying for purposes other than public transport; and A(1) and (2) and B(1), (2), (3), (4), (5) and (6) (ii) when flying under Instrument Flight Rules; (aa) outside controlled airspace - D A and B are about equipment, seat belts etc D says Scale D (1) In the case of a helicopter or gyroplane, a slip indicator. (2) In the case of any other flying machine either— (a) a turn indicator and a slip indicator; or (b) a gyroscopic bank and pitch indicator and a gyroscopic direction indicator. (3) A sensitive pressure altimeter adjustable for any sea level barometric pressure which the weather report or forecasts available to the commander of the aircraft indicate is likely to be encountered during the intended flight. I can't see any other requirement for IFR flight in the UK in VMC OCAS. I have several friends with aircraft with no electrical systems who fly non-radio who sometimes fly in accordance with IFR VMC OCAS below 3000'. TOO |
TheOddOne, that's correct as far as it goes ... but you're still completely ignoring the other legal requirement, which is compliance with the Kinds of Operations Equipment List contained within the POH.
In my aeroplane, flight under IFR (inside or outside controlled airspace and in VMC or IMC) requires the following flight instruments to be fitted and operable: ASI; Altimeter; Attitude Indicator; Directional Gyro; Magnetic Compass; OAT Indicator; Clock; Slip-Skid Indicator; and Rate-of-Turn Indicator. Since this is a requirement contained within the Limitations Section of the POH, it is a legal necessity for validity of the CofA. I have several friends with aircraft with no electrical systems who fly non-radio who sometimes fly in accordance with IFR VMC OCAS below 3000'. |
As bookworm suggests, even if a) is removed, a plane without an ADF will still be practically useless for IFR, due to the large number of approaches in UK and abroad which feature an NDB. |
OK I agree ;)
By "practically" I was thinking about being legal in countries where the carriage of an ADF is mandatory for flying NDB-based approaches. It's a while since I did a trawl of the AIPs but I recall Switzerland mandated the carriage of an ADF for any NDB approach, which is a novelty (no such rule in the UK). |
I'm racking my brain to think of the last time that I used the ADF for anything (apart from getting the Cricket scores).
In all the practical IF that I do the ADF is not used because the Area Nav will do the job of getting you to an NDB better than the ADF will, for legal reasons I may well tune the ADF to the station. The big problem is that if the requirement for ADF is dropped some of the NDB approaches will be withdrawn and the way things are going in the UK at the moment these approaches won't be replaced with GNSS (GPS) approaches. Having started using the GNSS approaches for real now I find it hard to see why the authority's are taking so much time to bin the ADF once and for all the safety case alone must be compelling. |
I remember !
The last "real" NDB approach that I did was about 15 years back into Cologne one night when the ILS was off for maintenance, the ADF needle spent almost the whole approach swinging between the NDB and two large thunderstorms, I thank my luck that the cloud base was well above the minima that night.
Each time I do an IR renewal as I go down the NDB approach I can't help thinking that in this day and age I should not be doing this with a 78 tonne airliner! (or a PA34!!). |
Minimum Instruments for IFR
"Don't get me wrong, the aircraft I usually fly has serious EFIS and a good FMS (which uses GPS as well as DME and VOR), but I like to cross check and I find the ADF needle an invaluable aid to situational awareness. "
So what do would you do if the the ADF pointed in a different direction from your FMS?:confused: |
So what do would you do if the the ADF pointed in a different direction from your FMS? I had a funny exchange with an instructor a while ago. I asked him what he would do if the ADF said he was OK but a GPS was saying he is going to die. His reply was he would trust the ADF. D*ckhead. This kind of stupidity, within some of the instructing profession, is why we still have these attitudes. The correct answer, for most people I think, is you climb to the SSA, get radar vectors, and land somewhere with an ILS. |
This leads to an interesting debate whether an ADF should be used for flying these; suprisingly there appears to be no legal requirements for that I think the point of DME and ADF being required to be carried but not required to be used is that there can be approved alternatives for use in an FMS-equipped aircraft (but requiring the radio kit to be carried as a back up or cross-check) |
CJboy
Did you actually use the ADF? I would tune the thing if it was part of the procedure and keep it in the scan but to be quite honest I have not had to make any practical use of the information that the ADF had to offer for a long time.
I find it very hard to think of a situation it which an ADF would tell you that the FMS had gone wrong before the FMS had done so already, ADF is dark ages technology with so many potential errors that if someone tried to introduce it now as a new navigation system they would lock them up in the funny farm! To be quite honest I think that you would do well to examine he way you are flying the aircraft to see if some of your practices are not a hang over from the way the IR is taught in the UK and you are not using the out dated practices that are the stock in trade of those who love to turn everything into a black art just to make themselves look clever. |
The good old days
I know technology has moved on but I used to get great satisfaction out of being able to complete a plus/minus 10 second NDB hold and approach. Oh the good old days, does any one remember the VDF procedure .. Request QDM:)
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Looks like I have hit the nail on the head and got you thinking about this!
I did not in any way criticise you or the way you fly but just suggested that you look at things from another viewpoint and examine the way you are (or are not) using the information presented to you and the value you place upon it. To think that the ADF will tell you that an FMS has packed up before the FMS will tell you its self is deeply flawed thinking, it would seem that you are tuning the ADF as some sort of safety blanket without thinking of the limitations of the system. Map shift is very unlikely with a modern FMS and almost imposable to correct with out a good position fix and ADF simply would not give you such a fix, VOR/DME is just about up to this. So the bottom line is that the ADF points (sometimes) at something that is (sometimes) useful but is subject to all sorts of errors (at random) so I like you tune the thing each approach in line with company SOP,s but it is not the source of much in the way of useful or reliable information. So why are we bothering with ADF in this day and age? However the way you seem to snap back at another view on the subject seems to indicate a mind that is already half closed to another view of the way aircraft can be flown, remember that the worlds biggest user of aircraft no longer requires ADF for IFR flight. |
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