Title: INSTRUMENT LANDING SYSTEM ILS Background Components
1INSTRUMENT LANDING SYSTEM
2ILS
- Background
- Components
- Localizer
- Glide Path
- ILS dangers and problem history
- CAT II
- PRM ILS Approaches
3ILS
- Developed in the 40s
- CAT II developed in the 60s
450 Hz
150 Hz
2920 ft
5Reliable Localizer Signal Coverage
690 Hz
1.4 º
5º
150 Hz
7Glideslope antenna located between 750 and 1250
feet from threshold to provide 55/-5 ft TCH
offset 250-600 Beam width at OM (5nm from
runway) approximately 730ft. Beam width at DH
approximately 98ft (50 feet high or low at DH
gives full scale deflection.) Tangent 1.4degrees
x/4000ft (where 4000 is the distance from
transmitter at DH). Xtan1.44000 X98
90 Hz
1.4 º
5º
150 Hz
8- Glide path signals are bounced off the ground
- Extensive site preparation is required
- Water-soaked ground, excessive snow, or extremely
long grass can affect the signal - Glide slope monitors detect bad signals and
automatically shut down the transmitter
9ILS Critical Area (US)
- Disturbances to ILS localizer and glide slope
courses may occur when surface vehicles or
aircraft are operated near the localizer or glide
slope antennas. (AIM 1-1-9k)
10- ATC issues control instructions to avoid ILS
critical areas as follows - WX Conditions Less than 800/2
- vehicles aircraft are not authorized in the
critical area when an arriving aircraft is
between the ILS FAF and the airport . . . - unless the aircraft has reported the airport in
sight and is circling or side stepping to land on
a rwy other than the ILS rwy - WX Conditions At or above 800/2
- No critical area protective action is provided.
- A flight crew should advise the tower that it
will conduct an AUTOLAND or COUPLED approach to
ensure that the ILS critical areas are protected
when the aircraft is inside the ILS MM. - Note Critical areas are not protected at
uncontrolled airports.
11ILS Critical Area(Canada)
- RAC 4.2.7 When an airport is operating under
CAT II or III wx conditions, pilots are to
observe CAT II or III mandatory holding position
signs. - When an airport is not operating under CAT II or
III weather conditions, pilots need not abide by
the CAT II or III taxiway holding positions and
are expected to taxi to the CAT I taxiway holding
position markings, unless advised otherwise by
ATC.
12Vehicles not subject to ATC may cause momentary
deviation to ILS course or glide slope signals.
13False Glide Paths
- When the glide slope bounces off the ground,
additional glide paths are also created. - The 6º false signal will be a reciprocal signal
(fly up/down commands will be reversed). The 9º
false signal will be oriented in the same manner
as the true glide slope.
14What to do about it
- Intercept from below
- Check your VVI
- Do a little math (300 x Dist to Rwy)
15False Glide Path vs. Erroneous Glide Path
- A false glide path is a normal by-product of the
ILS transmission and provides a distinct, but
incorrect, glideslope. - An erroneous glideslope does not provide a
defined path. - It is a malfunction of the signal, the
instrument, or both. - There may be no warning flags visible.
- The autopilot is quite happy to follow an
erroneous glidepath.
16The Main Points
- The ILS can display grossly inaccurate
indications that look perfectly valid with no
associated warnings to the crew - There is no ident on the glideslope signal
-
- A valid ILS ident and absence of warning flags
does not guarantee that the glideslope signal is
correct
17Alitalia DC-9Zurich, Switzerland14 Nov 1990
A
18- AC Pull, pull, pull, pull! (Autopilot
disconnect) - FO Go around
- AC No, no, no, no . . .catch the glide,
- Pitch from -2 to 5, power up, VVI from -1100
to -190 - AC (9 sec later) Can you hold it?
- FO Yes.
- (1 sec later) Radio altimeter warning (200
AGL) - (2 sec later) Impact
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20Accident Investigation Notes
- Glideslope indication 1 was unreliable.
- Autopilot was probably following a frozen
glideslope signal. - A go around is seen as a failure, a lack of
professional competence and even loss of
prestige. - There are newer, more advanced navigation
receivers that are not able to detect a signal
break or open circuit between the receiver and
the cockpit instruments. - Alitalia pilots in general were not aware that
the instrument indications could be incorrect
with no off flags showing.
21- Operators of aircraft equipped with the
following navigation receivers must include
procedures for detecting malfunctions that result
in the display of disparate information - Collins 51RV-1
- Collins 51RV-4
- Wilcox 806
- King KNR 6030
- Bendix RNA 26C
22B
Air New Zealand 30 July 2000
23Air New Zealand
- Cleared for (autocoupled) ILS Rwy 08 to Faleolo
Intl, W. Samoa - Autopilot captured the localizer
- APP was armed and glideslope was captured
- On glideslope throughout the approach
- PF noted an anomaly in DME vs altitude
- PNF noticed that visual cues did not match
- A go-around was commanded at 400 AGL, 6 mi. from
runway. - A second approach was flown using LOC only
procedures - Flt instruments showed on glideslope during
second approach
24- Go-around initiated On glide path for approach
go-around until abeam the rwy - No OFF FLAGS
- Good ident
- GP monitor was in a test mode, which inhibited
the automatic shutdown of a faulty transmitter
that was not radiating all of the GP signal. - The crew had read the NOTAMs, which showed the
VOR, ILS/GP, ILS/DME were unmonitored, and the
ILS/GP had no standby transmitter. -
25Missed Approach
- PF lost SA--went into survival mode
- From inquiry to action in less than 10 sec
- Crew supported the pilots decision to go-around
- Most conservative/safest response is always best.
26 Fredericton Incident
C
27Recommendations
- The glideslope check is imperative
- If the check at the Outer Marker reveals any
discrepancies, then a go-around should be
initiated and the problem solved before starting
another approach. - Crosscheck altitude and distance periodically
(DME or FMS) - Ø Crosscheck radio altitude and barometric
altitude - Ø Crosscheck ground speed and rate of descent
- Question ATC when indications do not appear to be
correct
28Glideslope Check Altitude
- Is it an altimeter check or a glideslope check?
29 Localizer False Course Capture
- Caused by incompatibility of ground and air
equipment - Even if both meet requirements
- Report it to ATC
- Most likely to occur when the aircraft is 8º to
12º from the published localizer course
30ILS False Localizer CaptureVictoria, June 2001
D
31Procedural Defences AIM COM 3.13.1
- To reduce the risk of false captures
- approach mode should not be selected until the
aircraft is within 18 nm of the threshold and
positioned within 8º of the inbound ILS course - pilots should use raw data sources to ensure
that the aircraft is on the correct localizer
course before initiating a coupled approach
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33LDALocalizer Type Directional Aid
- Localizer transmitter but not aligned with runway
- Has same accuracy as localizer but course will
not be within 3 degrees of centerline. - Straight-in mins if alignment lt 30 degrees
- May have glideslope
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35SDFSimplified Directional Facility
- Similar to localizer
- Course beam is wider (6 or 12 degrees)
- Antenna may be offset from centerline
- Normally within 3
36CAT II ILS
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38Cat II ILS
- Only the Airbus, Challenger and Dash 8 are
certified for CAT II ops - Special equipment including
- Dual everything except single FD
- Dual Autopilot,
- Dual Rad alts,
- Dual VHF, etc.
- Special procedures published
- Crews need certification
39PARALLELILS APPROACHES
- Dependent Parallel
- Simultaneous Parallel
- Simultaneous Close Parallel (PRM)
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41SIMULTANEOUS CLOSE PARALLEL ILS PRM APPROACHES
- Centerlines lt 4300 apart but gt3400
- Precision Runway Monitor (PRM)
- Special Procedures
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44Simultaneous Offset Instrument Approach (SOIA)
45Questions on PRM ?