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| | #1 |
| Old Skool |
Studying for my IFR test when it comes to question about GPS/RNAV they only talk about procedures such as RNAV/GPS DP's and arrivals. Are there RNAV/GPS waypoints for the enroute segment of flight. Or enroute at flight level is that all purely ground based navigation via VOR's?
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| | #2 |
| Agent Smith |
There are both waypoints formed from ground-based equipment and also waypoints that are purely RNAV.
__________________ Doug Taylor http://76school.flyblog.com (old!) http://30west.flyblog.com (updated 11/28) |
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| | #3 | |
| Old Skool | Quote:
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| | #4 |
| Old Skool Join Date: Sep 2001 Location: Inside your OODA loop
Posts: 7,025
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He means that an RNAV/GPS route can be defined by waypoints colocated with ground-based navaids, or by waypoints colocated with unicorn ranches. Since lots of GPS approaches are "overlay" approaches--meaning they simply replicate a non-precision approach with waypoints instead of navaids, radials and DME fixes--it often makes sense to route to a navaid or other ground-referenced fix when flying GPS-direct just to integrate with the terminal structure.
__________________ Commercial Pilot, ASEL/AMEL/IA 900+ TT/25 ME Mountain-qualified Search & Rescue/Disaster Relief Mission Pilot, Civil Air Patrol B.S., Psychology, Univ of Utah |
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| | #5 |
| Old Skool |
Waypoints that are strickly RNAV are 5 letters long and have to be phoneticly pronouncable (although there are some that aren't that easy). Ground based navigation stations (VORs, NDBs, LOCs etc) can be tuned in using a radio frequency and tracked that way, or for the most part also can be entered into a GPS/FMC using their letter identifier and become a fix in the RNAV world. As far as pure GPS fixes used for enroute flight? I don't think you will find too many on victor or jet airways as they need to be navigatble by /a aircraft, although now that I think about there are some (fixes that are marked by an "x" on a jep chart). Also in the enroute stage it is pretty common to be cleared direct to a VOR when you are too far to pick it up. For RNAV aircraft it is a simple matter of throwing the identifier in the box and pressing NAV. The /a airplanes will generally ask for a heading and get a response like "fly 040, direct XXX when able." Is that what you were asking?
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