Jakobb Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 Does anybody have a document with the approach minima (eg. min. RVR)/what kind of approaches the TBM can fly legally (CAT 3?)! thanks! Quote
BjornMa Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 The manual says: Do not use autopilot in approach under 200 ft (60 m). Quote
danhenri Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 (edited) Yeap, only CAT I ils approaches. And for CAT II et III approaches, you need to engage 2 autopilots for redundancy. Edited October 29, 2018 by danhenri Quote
Jakobb Posted October 29, 2018 Author Report Posted October 29, 2018 41 minutes ago, BjornMa said: The manual says: Do not use autopilot in approach under 200 ft (60 m). but that does not necessary inhibit an approach with minima below 200ft. 29 minutes ago, danhenri said: You can only select barometric minima in the FMS (no radiometric) : so, I presume (I am not a IFR pilot), only CAT-I ILS approaches may be authorized. I am not sure that you can select a radio height as you can do in the real Garmin 1000. The minima for RNAV or non precision approaches are specified on the charts, depending of the kind of approaches available (LPV, LNAV/VNAV, LNAV + V). For these, you should be able to get a RAIM prediction (i.e. the satellite geometry available by your avionics), but it is not simulated. Min RVR required are given too by the airport charts. My question was geared more towards which ILS category the TBM can fly as it's the default G1000 thus the normal XP limits are important. The no AP below 200ft rule would, at least in theory, allow CAT II ( 100-200 ft minimum and RVR greater than 300). Thanks guys! Quote
danhenri Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 (edited) I deleted my message before you answered to it, because I realized your question was indeed about ILS landings. As I wrote here, but perhaps I'm wrong, the TBM 900 does not have the equipments required for Ils approaches other than Cat I. I read some web documentation on this matter and the regulations are extremely complicated. Edited October 29, 2018 by danhenri 1 Quote
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