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R' Rawlings

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aircraft equipage slower than predicted (practically no retrofit had occurred) ... Impact on aircraft equipage kept to a minimum. RNAV in Terminal Airspace Workshop ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: R' Rawlings


1
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2
An Historical Perspective
Area Navigation
  • R. Rawlings
  • Airspace Management and Navigation Unit
  • EUROCONTROL Agency

3
OVERVIEW
  • Development of RNAV
  • B-RNAV Implementation
  • Limitations
  • Where Now

4
STARTING POINT
  • Where do we start?
  • VOR Movers
  • DECCA Navigator eg OMNITRACK etc 1960s
  • Starting point for systems we today call RNAV
  • Late 60s early 70s -
  • Early digital RNAV using VOR/DME navigation

Potential benefits of RNAV systems have long been
appreciated but only slowly realised .
5
TOWARDS THE FMS
  • 70-80s emphasis placed on FMS - economy of
    operation etc.
  • 1971 Decca Ambac MONA FMS system certified for
    carriage on L1011
  • VOR/DME RNAV at start
  • mid 70s - DME/DME
  • 1980 DME/DME accuracy shown better than 0.5NM.
  • Phased implementation for RNAV in en-route and
    terminal area recommended. Eventual use of
    4D-RNAV anticipated.
  • 1983 EUROCONTROL analysis of 12000 en-route
    tracks show standard deviation of 0.4NM.

6
POST 1980s
  • FMS has become standard fit on modern aircraft
  • But
  • ATC could not provide special service for limited
    subset of aircraft - reduces capacity
  • routes remained oriented to ground navaids
  • optimum profiles (FMS) constrained by need to
    maximize airspace capacity
  • Expected gains therefore not realised

7
RESULT
  • Pressure from operators who equipped with RNAV
  • Options reviewed in late 1980s
  • Considered status and future development
    capabilities
  • Considered 1998 as a target date for RNAV
    application

8
EQUIPAGE FORECASTS
1986 estimates
100
by operators for
ALL Area NAV
P-RNAV (1986 Estimates)
80
FMS 1986 Est.
60
Area NAV (1981 IATA Est.)
40
FMS (1981 IATA Est.)
20
1986 Estimate
4D FMS
0
1980
1990
2000
Year
9
ECAC MINISTERS DECISIONS
  • The two ECAC Strategies for the 1990s, adopted
    in April 1990 and March 1992 respectively,
    required that
  • the carriage of RNAV equipment will become
    mandatory in all en-route airspace by 1 January
    1998.
  • States are to make available RNAV based
    procedures for IFR operations in Terminal areas.

10
PREPARATION
  • BASIS ECAC Strategy for 90s
  • ICAO FEATS Strategy
  • FEATS -P-RNAV the norm in the first half of the
    period of application (1995-2005)
  • AIC issued by EUROCONTROL in 1991
  • Precision RNAV (P-RNAV) required above FL 290
  • Basic RNAV (B-RNAV) required in designated
    airspace below 290
  • RNAV Standard developed by EUROCONTROL -
    published 1993

11
B-RNAV Implemented
  • 1995 AIC
  • With effect from 1998, the carriage of B-RNAV
    equipment approved for RNP 5 operations will
    become mandatory on the entire ATS Route Network
    in the ECAC area including designated feeder
    routes (SIDs STARs) in/out of notified TMAs.

12
WHY B-RNAV ?
  • EUROCONTROL instituted a review of RNAV policy
  • aircraft equipage slower than predicted
    (practically no retrofit had occurred)
  • benefit to cost ratio of P-RNAV remained positive
    but was much smaller than expected.
  • benefits to be derived from B-RNAV were
    themselves significant and sufficient to warrant
    a B-RNAV mandate,
  • achieving capacity gains would require a uniform
    application on all ATS routes and link/feeder
    routes.

13
B-RNAV EQUIPPAGE
  • Ground infrastructure (VOR/DME) remains
  • non-RNAV reversion possible
  • Not proposed for Terminal Operations
  • Therefore simplified requirements
  • lower integrity/continuity/functionality
  • no data base required
  • enabled significant proportion of aircraft to
    meet requirement with existing equipment, allowed
    simpler GPS based systems

14
B-RNAV LIMITATIONS
  • Limited applicability to TMA
  • workload
  • wide variation in track performance on procedures
  • integrity
  • BUT
  • Many aircraft equipped with systems better than
    minimum

15
B-RNAV RESULTS
  • Greater flexibility to airspace designers -
    routes no longer have to be defined by navaid
    locations.
  • Additional routes possible
  • Structural changes support increased airspace
    capacity
  • Revised route structure gives reduced track
    miles.
  • Impact on aircraft equipage kept to a minimum.

16
EXAMPLE
17
BEYOND INITIAL B-RNAV IMPLEMENTATION
  • Uniform application for all en-route Flight
    Levels and - where needed - on feeder routes
    to/from TMAs
  • Aims of FEATS Strategy met even though P-RNAV not
    required
  • Need to consider longer term developments post
    B-RNAV
  • Navigation Strategy developed - covers period to
    2015 and beyond

18
FREE ROUTES PROJECT
  • NEXT STEP FOR EN-ROUTE RNAV APPLICATION
  • Remove need for fixed RNAV Routes in upper
    airspace
  • 8-States Project, Civil and Military
  • (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Germany,
    Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and
    Eurocontrol)
  • provides
  • Increased capacity
  • Reduced cost
  • More flexibility
  • No additional airborne equipment (B-RNAV)
  • Phased Implementation extend ultimately to whole
    ECAC

19
TMA RNAV
  • Pressure to use RNAV in TMA
  • Need to link Airport with RNAV en-route
  • RNAV routes offer potential for improved
    efficiency
  • environmental impact
  • Implementations have started to occur
  • Initially B-RNAV with operational restrictions
  • now P-RNAV using the new JAA material

20
OBSERVATIONS
  • Some initial implementations gave poor track
    consistency
  • large variation in RNAV procedure application
  • RNAV limitations not always appreciated in the
    design of procedures
  • To develop a consistent and safe ECAC wide
    application - Terminal Airspace RNAV Application
    (TARA) Task force established

21
Performance Variation
Performance differences observed during
EUROCONTROL Studies in early 90s
OM16
DALIK
DC10
B737
B737
B737
B737
SID
22
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24
TMA RNAV DEVELOPMENTS
  • Initial work directed to providing greatest
    applicability to existing equipment
  • EUROCONTROL RNAV Procedure Design Guidelines
    published 1998
  • JAA TGL for P-RNAV published in November 2000

25
Precision RNAV (P-RNAV)
  • RNP 1 accuracy
  • Aim to enable majority of FMS/RNAV meet standard.
  • Early application of RNAV meeting RNP 1 accuracy

26
RNP (x) RNAV
  • MASPS for RNP (x) RNAV developed jointly by RTCA
    and EUROCAE
  • Aim
  • RNAV capable of meeting RNP requirements
  • Integrity
  • Functionality
  • etc.

27
THE FUTURE
  • RNAV applications developing rapidly -
    criticality of operations increase
  • En-route
  • TMA
  • Approach
  • Need to ensure that RNAV developments can provide
    the environment in which RNAV applications can be
    safe, efficient and cost effective.

28
IMPLICATIONS
  • Need to consider the implications of the proposed
    RNAV applications
  • Operators - decisions about re-equipment
  • ATS providers - preparations for changes to
    airspace and operations
  • Data providers - quality of co-ordinate data
  • Airspace planners/procedure designers -RNAV
    capability and limitations
  • etc

29
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