On Sat, 20 Jul 2002 11:06:29  
 Gene Mechtly wrote:
...
>Air-pressure altimeters will soon be replaced entirely by GPS devices
>even in small private aircraft at very low cost.  Vertical separation
>of corridors does not have to depend on altitude for safety.
>
Indeed!  I'm really looking forward to the day when these instruments will be 
"standard" in all aircraft!  And, hopefully, these will NOT carry the hideous "option" 
for the nautical mile crap!  :-(

>I would like to see proposals from Baron and Marcus (and from any other
>experienced pilots) on their recommendations for altitudes and bearings
>for a new set of corridors, optimized in rounded m and km, of course,
>with *no* consideration of present corridors in feet and kilofeet.
>
Thanks, Gene, for the opportunity you're giving us, pilots, to have some say on the 
issue.

While I haven't thought about this thoroughly yet, please find here enclosed some 
sparse ideas for a few things.

Bearings:

I'd use 00-09 for the first quadrant (the fundamental unit to use here would be the 
grade/gon), 10-19, for the second, 20-29, for the third, and 30-39 for the fourth.  
The first number would indicate the quadrant in question, evidently, 0 for NE, 1 for 
SE, 2 for SW and 3 for NW.  Easy, to the point.  This bearing would be placed in all 
airports runways and would replace the current 00-35 ones.

Amateur navigational charts would be produced with the new spherical cartographic 
system based on gons to the centigon accuracy (0.01).

Altitude flight levels would still use the convenient "halves", i.e. 000-199, 200-399 
gons.

Altitude separations would be in 250 m increments or 500 m (the former definitely 
around busier air traffic areas).  After 5000 m we'd use the 1013.5 hPa air pressure 
setting (as opposed to 18000 ft).  Separations would be every 500 m upwards of that.

There would obviously be more "rules" to define, but I'd have to go back to my manuals 
and all to try to come up with the equivalent metric ones.  However, one alternative 
to this tedious job would simply be for us to adopt either the already-in-use Chinese 
or Russian model and make it official everywhere else.

>If there is agreement, we might want to promote them to world aviation
>authorities as a new standard, say, for 2005 implementation.
>...
Indeed.  But, perhaps the more sensible thing to do, again I repeat, would be for us 
to simply look at the present metric flight rules options and request that one of them 
be adopted by everyone.

Marcus


Is your boss reading your email? ....Probably
Keep your messages private by using Lycos Mail.
Sign up today at http://mail.lycos.com

Reply via email to