jetdriven Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 A few days ago filed IFR M20P/I for a trip to New Orleans from Houston, twice. We have a VFR installation of a KLN-89B GPS and an aera 500 and iPad. I also put "VFR GPS" in the remarks. Per the FAA, the "/I" equpment suffix means " LORAN, VOR/DME, or INS, transponder with Mode C" Anyways, the controllers cleared me to several downrange fixes enroute, and I cancelled IFR and did the visual to New Orleans, and the VOR/B to KLVJ. My copilot helper thinks I misrepresented my aircraft to the FAA, and that I was in the wrong. My position is this: The FAA never got around to amending that line in the text to include "VFR GPS" in lieu of LORAN the LORAN in our J was replaced by a VFR GPS in 1996 it is much more accurate Controller workload is lower because they know we have enroute IFR capabiltiy We can navigate enrout much better than the LORAN that was removed the 747 I fly is RNP-10 (+/- 10 miles enroute) and it has /I FMS, we can do ten times better We can navigate enroute same or better than LORAN/INS/FMS I can defend the use of VFR GPS as an equlvalent to LORAN (LORAN is dead anywasy) at a hearing. What are your thoughts? Did I lie to the FAA? MIsrepresent? Commit a violation? Quote
OR75 Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 I am thinking none of the above. From the FAA/atc standpoint if you say that it is avfr gps then it cannot be used for enroute (same as having a handheld). The kln89b is tso129 so can be used for enroute navigation. Quote
N601RX Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 For the KLN 89B to be certified for a non precision approach or enroute it has to have. A TSO'D antenna. Below a certain serial number were not. Connected to your encoder. Connected to an approved annunciator. Connected to a CDI. Flight manual Supplement. I recently installed one in our plane to replace the ADF. I have a extra annunciator. Quote
xftrplt Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Byron, Since you elected to try your case in moot court, I'll offer an opinion: Your logic may be correct, but you weren't /I for reasons expressed above. You may try to defend your position to the Feds, but listen to your copilot, or, as they say, your hearing will improve at the hearing. (Of course, there's no problem...until there's a problem.) Quote
Cris Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Per the FAA, the "/I" equpment suffix means " LORAN, VOR/DME, or INS, transponder with Mode C" Since you are arguing the loran section I would agree with Dick above. However assuming that you have VOR/DME and could identify the downrange fixes when in range and you had VFR GPS in the remarks I would think that you are legal but not because you are substituting a VFR GPS for Loran but rather VOR/DME. To be safe I'd ask the controller for an iniial on course vector to the fix advising that it confirms your VFR GPS. Quote
bnicolette Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 That's a good one. This is certainly one area where the FAA is really behind IMO. My handheld GPS from back in the 90's was more accurate and reliable than these older Lorans were. I don't understand why the FAA wouldn't update their equipment suffix's to allow regular GPS's for at least enroute navigation. Even the cheap GPS contained in my iPhone is able to maintain RNP10. I file /I but I am using my KNS80 as the basis for that even though I rarely program it and use one of the three GPS's in my Mooney to go direct. (GPS396, Apollo 360, iPad) Unfortuneatley, I think that unless you have the listed units for /I, I personally don't think it's legal. I also don't agree with that logic and it is very outdated. I suppose the right thing to do would be to file the correct equipment suffix and then just ask for direct. In a radar enviroment I really don't think it matters what we use to go from point A to B. I think we can all agree that the VFR GPS's are every bit as accurate as the IFR GPS for enroute navigation. I always have either the iPad or iPhone up and running along with the other GPS's in my airplane. I can honestly say that I have never seen one of them say anything different that another in regards to bearing, track, groundspeed, etc.. Has anybody here ever seen anything different between one of their IFR GPS's and their VFR GPS's? I would be interested to find out? Quote
xftrplt Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 I suppose the right thing to do would be to file the correct equipment suffix and then just ask for direct. Exactly. Quote
John Pleisse Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 She is right.... 10:1 you would have gotten the same routing just filing /a anyway. Just a thought...what would it cost to get the KLN89B converted to enroute only? I know it is throwing good money after bad, but would you have to have all the annunciators? Isn't all that mess in the panel more for the approach cert? I mean, it's already in the panel and doing the same job anyway, right? Quote
Cruiser Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: jetdriven snip.... What are your thoughts? Did I lie to the FAA? MIsrepresent? Commit a violation? Quote
gregwatts Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: Bnicolette That's a good one. This is certainly one area where the FAA is really behind IMO. My handheld GPS from back in the 90's was more accurate and reliable than these older Lorans were. I don't understand why the FAA wouldn't update their equipment suffix's to allow regular GPS's for at least enroute navigation. Even the cheap GPS contained in my iPhone is able to maintain RNP10. I file /I but I am using my KNS80 as the basis for that even though I rarely program it and use one of the three GPS's in my Mooney to go direct. (GPS396, Apollo 360, iPad) Unfortuneatley, I think that unless you have the listed units for /I, I personally don't think it's legal. I also don't agree with that logic and it is very outdated. I suppose the right thing to do would be to file the correct equipment suffix and then just ask for direct. In a radar enviroment I really don't think it matters what we use to go from point A to B. I think we can all agree that the VFR GPS's are every bit as accurate as the IFR GPS for enroute navigation. I always have either the iPad or iPhone up and running along with the other GPS's in my airplane. I can honestly say that I have never seen one of them say anything different that another in regards to bearing, track, groundspeed, etc.. Has anybody here ever seen anything different between one of their IFR GPS's and their VFR GPS's? I would be interested to find out? Quote
Becca Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: xftrplt I suppose the right thing to do would be to file the correct equipment suffix and then just ask for direct. Exactly. Quote
jetdriven Posted April 30, 2012 Author Report Posted April 30, 2012 Sinde we have dual VOR and DME does it qualify for /I under that? Quote
jetdriven Posted April 30, 2012 Author Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: Cruiser Yes, Yes, Yes. your suffix is for IFR CERTIFIED equipment approved for IFR use in your plane. Quote
Cris Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: jetdriven Sinde we have dual VOR and DME does it qualify for /I under that? Quote
OR75 Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 LORAN C could be approved for enroute navigation when installed under TSO C60B & C115A. The ARNAV FMS 5000 comes to mind when thinking about an IFR enroute unit. Quote
jetdriven Posted April 30, 2012 Author Report Posted April 30, 2012 between the aera 500, KLN-89B, iPad, and iPhone, they are all within .1-.2 NM at 99 NM. they always show the same mileage above 100 Quote
1964-M20E Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Another way is to file the route using VORs and then ask the controller for a vector of XX degrees between your current position and the airport or fix you want to go to. Then you are on a vector from ATC. You follow the vector on your VFR GPS in the IFR system. You can remain on that vector as long as each controller gives it to you. Quote
Cruiser Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: jetdriven Sinde we have dual VOR and DME does it qualify for /I under that? Quote
Cris Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 It would seem to me that the equipment designation of / I "Loran, VOR/DME or INS with transponder Mode C" makes a VOR/DME perfectly acceptable under this designation. Keep in mind the FAA still considers ground based equipment as "primary". It is not "VFR" equipment assuming the monthly accuracy checks have been made in order to operate within the ATC sustem. IFR/GPS enroute/approach equipment on the other can not be used as primary unless there is back up ground based equipment. This is due to the raim issues on some equipment like the KLN 94. There are some differances with the newer GPS units as I recall. In any event intersections are often identified with a distance and radial from a VOR so assuming you can get close enough to receive the signal should be able to navigate albeit less easily than with a KNS 80 or GPS. Note: The equipment list does not say loran "with" VOR/DME as it does with some of the other designators but rather "or". the statement also uses "with" to add the in this case the Mode C transponder. Quote
John Pleisse Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 It's just like the header on an instrument plate. Minimun required equipment, not "choose either". Quote
xftrplt Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: gregwatts As I descend and get closer to the airport.......the gap closes. I believe that the 696 measuresthe distance from the airport to the unit....whereas the 430 measures from the airport to a point on the ground over which I am flying. The discrepancy only exists when the fix is an airport. A geometry thing.....I guess Quote
jlunseth Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: Cris It would seem to me that the equipment designation of / I "Loran, VOR/DME or INS with transponder Mode C" makes a VOR/DME perfectly acceptable under this designation. Keep in mind the FAA still considers ground based equipment as "primary". It is not "VFR" equipment assuming the monthly accuracy checks have been made in order to operate within the ATC sustem. IFR/GPS enroute/approach equipment on the other can not be used as primary unless there is back up ground based equipment. This is due to the raim issues on some equipment like the KLN 94. There are some differances with the newer GPS units as I recall. In any event intersections are often identified with a distance and radial from a VOR so assuming you can get close enough to receive the signal should be able to navigate albeit less easily than with a KNS 80 or GPS. Note: The equipment list does not say loran "with" VOR/DME as it does with some of the other designators but rather "or". the statement also uses "with" to add the in this case the Mode C transponder. Quote
bnicolette Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Quote: xftrplt As I descend and get closer to the airport.......the gap closes. I believe that the 696 measuresthe distance from the airport to the unit....whereas the 430 measures from the airport to a point on the ground over which I am flying. The discrepancy only exists when the fix is an airport. A geometry thing.....I guess Quote
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