RNAV Arrival
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Scott..
Bill -- If you are flying the segment from WAGNR to ORTMN, and there is no NOPT on the chart, then you must fly the HILPT.
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Originally posted by Scott Dyer HPN/NY View PostI was out doing a little skywriting this afternoon.
Here’s my kind’a skywrite’n!
Back on 4/26/2018 south of Miami with one of the airplanes I use to fly.
Cessna TU206 @4,000' with a LiDAR sensor. 20:07 EDT~23:21 EDT
One way to drive ATC nuts. <grin>
Regards,
Tom Charlton
"The aeroplane has unveiled for us the true face of the earth." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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Originally posted by John O'Shaughnessy [FCM] View PostI was scribbling too: https://flightaware.com/live/flight/...938Z/KFCM/KFCM
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Originally posted by Bill Bridges View Post
Procedural Track a/k/a Procedure Track. When I see a heavy, dark line with an arrow head that would indicate to me that I must fly that course. In the HILT example above I would not have performed a tear drop entry but would have flown the outbound course of 144.
When I see what I would consider a Procedure Turn symbol I almost always use a tear drop because it works best with my simple mind. When I see a Jepp (and I may be misreading the IAP) the Procedure Turn looks like a Procedure Track to me and I must fly the course as published.
I'm not sure what you're getting at about a difference between FAA/DoD plates and Jepp in depicting HILPTs or PTs....today, anyway, they are pretty much the same and all derived from the underlying regulatory approach description. The only thing about HILPTs in civil flying is that you must "enter the hold" when the HILPt is required...but entering the hold merely means that you cross the holding fix on the entry, you needn't do a circuit. Thus, for the HILPT that is illustrated, if you decided to do a teardrop entry on reaching ORTMN from WAGNR, you would turn to a heading of (about, no wind) 100, fly that for a minute (maybe less depending if there is a tailwind), and then turn right to intercept the inbound final approach course outside of ORTMN. HILPT complete, without having to fly a 144 degree course at all.
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Originally posted by Tom Charlton View PostHi Scott,
Here’s my kind’a skywrite’n!
Back on 4/26/2018 south of Miami with one of the airplanes I use to fly.
Cessna TU206 @4,000' with a LiDAR sensor. 20:07 EDT~23:21 EDT
One way to drive ATC nuts. <grin>
Regards,
Tom Charlton
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Originally posted by Scott Dyer HPN/NY View Post
I'm not sure what you're getting at about a difference between FAA/DoD plates and Jepp in depicting HILPTs or PTs....today,
I only started using Jepp charts a couple of years ago when by chart service switched to them and I like them. I'd only been using DoD/FAA charts for 48 years. I know I'm old. ROFL
I really do enjoy these conversations about instrument flying. They remind me of the best job I ever had, an Instrument IP. The flying didn't get any better for me than flying "H" models 20 hours a week with an instrument student.
Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to visit with me about this issue.I Earned my Spurs in Vietnam
48th AHC 1971-72
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Originally posted by Jeff Hartmann View PostIf you (as I) thought this was only a speed trap technology...
https://gisgeography.com/lidar-light...n-and-ranging/
Yup. I are intimately familiar with LiDAR. I love the technology. It’s what I done did. Any questions about LiDAR . . . I’m your guy. <g>
Regards,
Tom Charlton
"The aeroplane has unveiled for us the true face of the earth." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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Any questions about LiDAR . . . I’m your guy.
Many a time, I have driven roads whose outlines had been obiterated by snowfall. I followed the line of utility poles, etc. and my knowledge of where the road had to be relative to the remaining sight picture.
Dunno what sensors Tesla uses, but one of the reasons it has sped up and crashed into stationary things is the poor angular resolution of its sensors. Above 40 MPH on a highway, stationary objects are ignored. Otherwise, the thing would autobrake for overhead signs, overpass support pillars, etc. Is that a LIDAR issue?Geology rocks, but geography is where it's at.
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Originally posted by Bill Bridges View Post
One of the differences to me is DoD uses a "barb" to indicate a procedure turn while Jepp uses a heavy arrow similar to a "procedure track" for a procedure turn. Some of the places I flew into in the military the course reversal on an approach was actually a procedural track.
I only started using Jepp charts a couple of years ago when by chart service switched to them and I like them. I'd only been using DoD/FAA charts for 48 years. I know I'm old. ROFL
I really do enjoy these conversations about instrument flying. They remind me of the best job I ever had, an Instrument IP. The flying didn't get any better for me than flying "H" models 20 hours a week with an instrument student.
Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to visit with me about this issue.
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Originally posted by Ray Tackett View PostI have a big one with regard to self-driving car technology.
Me too!
The testing seems to be happening in the sunniest, driest places. Around here, headlights and windshields pick up salt spray, snow, slush, and heavy rainfall. What happens when LIDAR gets a snootful of very salty water splashed up by adjacent traffic or gets packed with a wad of slush?
A fouled sensor could probably be detected 99.99% of the time and problem averted. But there’s that other 0.01% . . . that’s a lot’a crashes. <ng>
Many a time, I have driven roads whose outlines had been obiterated by snowfall. I followed the line of utility poles, etc. and my knowledge of where the road had to be relative to the remaining sight picture.
Dunno what sensors Tesla uses,
but one of the reasons it has sped up and crashed into stationary things is the poor angular resolution of its sensors. Above 40 MPH on a highway, stationary objects are ignored. Otherwise, the thing would autobrake for overhead signs, overpass support pillars, etc. Is that a LIDAR issue?
Many facets to this evolving technology.
* Driver assist v fully autonomous.
* Many kinds of sensors being experimented with singularly and in unison: ie: Sonic, Radar, LiDAR, GPS, Accelerometers, Gyros, Other feedback from the vehicle, +?
* AI to digest all the data and make continuous, real-time, life dependent decisions with it.
Regards,
Tom Charlton
"The aeroplane has unveiled for us the true face of the earth." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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