LNAV/VNAV
Example is EDDF RNAV(GPS) Z Rwy 25C. If the temp is bellow -15 C then baro VNAV is not authorised. So you use LNAV minima. If you have temp -18 C and do the temperature corrections according with the FCOM and enter the corrected altitudes in the FMS. During the approach can you use LNAV/VNAV? ( with the corrected altitudes and descend to LNAV minima)? Many people say that you have to do it LNAV and FPA or V/S because baro LNAV/VNAV minima are not authorised. My opinion is that you can use LNAV/VNAV during the approach with the corrected altitudes. Thank you in advance
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You can do it in any vertical speed mode as you like as long as the minimum altitudes are adhered to. Your company may have some SOP/restrictions but we do it in LNAV/VNAV yes.
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If you temp comp, yes LNAV/VNAV because the limits are there to "protect" the aircraft from descending outside the altitude limits. By compensating, you are flying true altitudes.
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toseg, I believe what you are saying is correct. If you have an uncompensated baro VNAV system you cannot use the LNAV/VNAV DA outside the temperature limits. You can still use the baro VNAV for vertical guidance but you have to fly to the LNAV MDA (and apply temperature correction to each segment altitude including MDA). If you have compensated baro VNAV you can use the LNAV/VNAV DA but you must still apply temperature correction to each altitude including DA. Ref AIM 5-4-5 and AC 90-105A App B.4.2
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The FCOM states that the approach procedure cannot be modified from FAF to MAPt, so adjusting altitudes to compensate the final segment for temp is not possible. Our company policy describes this as the reason LNAV/VNAV minima cannot be used when below the minimum temp. FCOM also says a vertical selected mode is available and consequently the minima will change to the published LNAV only minima. ( That's our company guidance anyway )
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Can you enter the temp into a temp comp FMS entry and have the FMS compensate for temps?
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GF: the Airbus kit does not have TEMP correction feature.
The only way to do it is to manually modify the altitudes over waypoints which: a) is rejected by the FMS as 3° profile is the basis of construction b) is explicitly forbidden by VNAV OPS approval. So, no (in our case). If temps are below what's charted then no (uncompensated) VNAV. Manual correction is not an approved TEMP compensation standard and would invalidate the coding. |
It should be borne in mind that the methodology used for obstacle protection for an LNAV/VNAV approach is quite different to that for an LNAV procedure. The VNAV functionality in the aircraft is not directly related to the procedure design.
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The chart is very specific Baro-VNAV operations N/A below -15C...non-comp or comp N/A
http://i67.tinypic.com/21e86qx.jpg My opinion is that you can use LNAV/VNAV during the approach with the corrected altitudes. You can do it in any vertical speed mode as you like as long as the minimum altitudes are adhered to. Your company may have some SOP/restrictions but we do it in LNAV/VNAV yes. If you temp comp, yes LNAV/VNAV because the limits are there to "protect" the aircraft from descending outside the altitude limits. By compensating, you are flying true altitudes. So, no (in our case). If temps are below what's charted then no (uncompensated) VNAV. Manual correction is not an approved TEMP compensation standard and would invalidate the coding. The FCOM states that the approach procedure cannot be modified from FAF to MAPt, so adjusting altitudes to compensate the final segment for temp is not possible |
Originally Posted by RUMBEAR
(Post 9715873)
The FCOM states that the approach procedure cannot be modified from FAF to MAPt, so adjusting altitudes to compensate the final segment for temp is not possible. Our company policy describes this as the reason LNAV/VNAV minima cannot be used when below the minimum temp. FCOM also says a vertical selected mode is available and consequently the minima will change to the published LNAV only minima. ( That's our company guidance anyway )
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The procedure is NA. Simple as that, below -15C, use the LNAV parameters
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Now, I thought/understood this was slightly different.
The LNAV part of the procedure remains the same. The VNAV part is where the anomalies arise. You may use VNAV as your descent profile/method, with any altitude/temperature corrections up to, but not inside the FAF. Within the published temperature (o/p gives -15c as the lower temperature limit) constraint of the procedure, then VNAV minima apply; LNAV/VNAV. once outside of the published temperature constraint, the LNAV only minima apply, which are likely higher. This does not mean that VNAV cannot be used; it simply means that your minima are higher. |
First i would like to thank you all very much for your answers . At FCTM is written the following : "Boeing airplanes have uncompensated Baro-VNAV systems and are prohibited from using LNAV/VNAV minima on approach charts when operating outside of published temperature restriction limits. However, if cold temperature altitude corrections are applied as described in the Cold Temperature Operations Supplementary Procedures chapter of the FCOM, descent to the corrected LNAV (MDA) minima is allowed." It says for minima not for VNAV mode.
Is mentioning to descent to LNAV minima but does not clarify if you can use VNAV mode. At the part C of my company, if you are above -15 C you correct the FAF altitude and the DA only by 10% .Not all the altitudes between. Bellow -15 C you correct all the altitudes and the MDA from the classic table. In the FMS you don't insert new points. Just correct the altitude of the existed ones in the FMS. |
Like Galaxy Flyer says, if you can enter the temperature in the FMS, then it will compensate for the altitudes in the approach procedure. The IF, and FAF will then have increased minimum altitudes, and then you must increase your LNAV or LNAV/VNAV minimums. Then compensate for the IAF altitude (talk to ATC if necessary). For us, ATC always says to cross the IAF "at or above" 3500 feet so that's not a problem.
With a cold temperature input to the FMS, the FMS adjusts the VNAV angle up a bit to compensate for the reduced altitude clearances that would exits if you used the somewhat lower altitudes that the altimeter reads on cold days. If the approach says NA, then it's NA, though I can only surmise that is old school before temp compensation was allowed by the designers. aTerpster will probably chime in. |
The next approach at the same airport is RNAV (GPS) Y Rwy 25C. Does not mention any temperature restriction and has LNAV minima. In this one why you can use the VNAV mode? With the same logic you shouldn't. You do only the altitude corrections to ensure the 3 deg. descend angle and use LNAV/VNAV. Any objection?
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*** completely re - edited having reread your question again and having read FDs excellent post below: There is no minimum temp on the chart you mention because it is not a "VNAV procedure" , IMHO the chart/minima is drawn on the basis of you using LNAV and VS or FPA having applied the appropriate corrections i.e. It is what FD describes as a 2D approach. Can you substitute VNAV? What does your ops manual say (we can in certain circumstances)?
On a more general point if no minimum temp is published for a "VNAV procedure" our ops manual says, to paraphrase "In the case of an RNAV approach where no minimum temperature is published....... pilots should assume a minimum temperature of ISA -25 for the use...of VNAV." FWIW We have uncompensated baro VNAV and are not allowed to alter RNAV altitudes in the FMC. |
toseq: there seems to be still a little confusion over the terminology because VNAV is used for two independent things. Let me try to split them so we can be certain of reading the same page. Most likely I'd be preaching to the converted, reader's patience is appreciated.
a) The LNAV+VNAV sub-version of RNP APCH. A stand-alone type of instrument approach procedure. Different from the others in its own manner, similar as with CAT II being different from a simple CAT I approach. Procedures for RNP LNAV+VNAV which is a 3D approach type (=with vertical guidance) require specific design, need to be published as such and operator must be authorized by their CAA to fly them, with all the bells and whistles normally associated such as training for the specifics of the operation. Maybe it is possible to call this "3D APCH (LNAV+VNAV)" for the purpose of this conversation. Note 1: The a) above is somewhat obscured by the fact that the printed chart is normally combined for "3D APCH (LNAV+VNAV) and "2D APCH(LNAV only)", the only visible difference being the two boxes of different minima. But they are fundamentally different, just like ILS and LOC approaches that also commonly share one page. b) The VNAV mode of autoflight vertical guidance. If the on-board system is capable of generating a vertical profile, a mathematical glide path for the final approach, the Flight Director may be set up to follow that guidance and provide steering commands for AP / human at controls. I'd call this VERTICAL GUIDANCE OF FMS/FD FOR FINAL APPROACH SEGMENT but it is such a mouthful. Settle for VNAV (FD mode)? Note: This b) is a widespread technology, commonly used to fly NDB and VOR approaches for decades. We let the machine calculate the profile and follow it, whilst checking from the underlying decisive NAVAID approach chart that the altitude / distance is reasonable. Just let the clever box sort out the guesswork of target and desired vertical speed values. These points should be visible now:
If I read the thread and your questions correctly: Topic 1 (closed): Can you perform a 3D APCH (VNAV+LNAV) approach outside temp envelope? ->> NO. Topic 2 (your last posted question): Please re-phrase. |
To add to confusion, it depends on software logic loaded into FMS as well...
VNAV can be activated/loaded in several methods, depending on which it will fly (e.g. geometric is what is loaded into our FMS). Geometric will allow VNAV to be used to fly a vertical profile as long as corrections are made. Note: though VNAV can be flow their minima cannot be used |
Flight detent has simplified the post very amazingly. THANKYOU.
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toseg
First i would like to thank you all very much for your answers . At FCTM is written the following : "Boeing airplanes have uncompensated Baro-VNAV systems and are prohibited from using LNAV/VNAV minima on approach charts when operating outside of published temperature restriction limits. However, if cold temperature altitude corrections are applied as described in the Cold Temperature Operations Supplementary Procedures chapter of the FCOM, descent to the corrected LNAV (MDA) minima is allowed." It says for minima not for VNAV mode. Is mentioning to descent to LNAV minima but does not clarify if you can use VNAV mode. At the part C of my company, if you are above -15 C you correct the FAF altitude and the DA only by 10% .Not all the altitudes between. Bellow -15 C you correct all the altitudes and the MDA from the classic table. In the FMS you don't insert new points. Just correct the altitude of the existed ones in the FMS. However, if you had WAAS (or equivalent type of SBAS) you CAN still use the LNAV/VNAV minima (and apply temperature correction to it). |
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