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I think that is a flight sim issue. The charted ILS 02 approach plate doesn’t show a CF02
But if you leave a CF02 in the flight plan behind you, the box will recognize that you’ve passed CF02 and auto sequence the TO waypoint to PESEX and see that it’s passed PESEX as well and sequence the TO waypoint again to the next waypoint NETVO or RWY02
Martinlest wrote:It often seems to happen that if you set an ILS approach for a particular runway and then want to add a STAR, the latter will duplicate one or more of the ILS waypoints.
An example: fly into Lisbon LPPT, runway 02. Select the ILS for that runway (no transition) and then STAR TROI9A. You then have a plan which includes the waypoint PESEX twice, once near the end of the STAR and again, after CF02, as part of the ILS approach. How is that resolved in practice? (Why would a STAR approach duplicate one of the ILS waypoints like this in any case? Surely most times a pilot will choose to add a STAR to an ILS approach, not use the STAR instead of the ILS. They hardly fulfil the same function of course). Does the flight computer ignore the duplicate waypoints, or does the aircraft turn and try to pass the waypoint(s) again? Or do you have to fiddle with editing the plan in the FMC. Or...?
Thanks
Woodreau wrote:I think that is a flight sim issue.
The charted ILS 02 approach plate doesn’t show a CF02
When you load the ILS 02 it will try to link the approach to the STAR with an APPR VIA PESEX. Which then loads the box with PT422 PESEX NETVO without the discontinuity.
If you do no transition then it loads the ILS with the FAF and one fix before the FAF - for this procedure there is no fix before the FAF - PESEX is the first fix on this ILS procedure and also serves as the FAF. so I’m guessing the flight sim made one up for you that a real FMS database wouldn’t have.
The only time I see a CF waypoint is if I select a runway with no approach. Then the box puts a CF waypoint along the extended centerline of the runway.
But if you leave a CF02 in the flight plan behind you, the box will recognize that you’ve passed CF02 and auto sequence the TO waypoint to PESEX and see that it’s passed PESEX as well and sequence the TO waypoint again to the next waypoint NETVO or RWY02.
Though I have no idea what logic has been programmed for your flight simulator to follow.
Woodreau wrote:I think that is a flight sim issue.
gunsontheroof wrote:Woodreau wrote:I think that is a flight sim issue.
That was my initial thought upon checking into this thread having had some experience with FMC issues in Flight Sim in the past, but nonetheless, it sparked my curiosity about real-world FMC use. I'd be interested to hear what any real-world pilots have to say about the training that goes into using FMC systems on different aircraft and whether there's differences training between systems or simply cursory "here's a weird thing on this one that you'll want to keep in mind..." explanations when you move from one aircraft to another. Basically, any "shop talk" about the ins and outs of day-to-day use might be of interest, but I suppose it might be one of those things that folks who actually sit up front will tell me is yawn-inducing minutiae.
gunsontheroof wrote:That was my initial thought upon checking into this thread having had some experience with FMC issues in Flight Sim in the past, but nonetheless, it sparked my curiosity about real-world FMC use. I'd be interested to hear what any real-world pilots have to say about the training that goes into using FMC systems on different aircraft and whether there's differences training between systems or simply cursory "here's a weird thing on this one that you'll want to keep in mind..." explanations when you move from one aircraft to another. Basically, any "shop talk" about the ins and outs of day-to-day use might be of interest, but I suppose it might be one of those things that folks who actually sit up front will tell me is yawn-inducing minutiae.
Martinlest wrote:Or do you have to fiddle with editing the plan in the FMC.
e38 wrote:Martinlest wrote:Or do you have to fiddle with editing the plan in the FMC.
Martinlest, yes, sometimes you do, depending on how the procedures (STAR/approach) load into the FMS, based upon transitions, VIAs, etc.
As you can tell from the previous responses, the best "takeaway" I can offer you in this case--and we do this regularly in real world operations--is once you have the procedures loaded into the FMS, carefully scroll through all the waypoints (and you can view them on the ND as well)--this is Airbus--to make sure you have no duplicate points and to ensure there are no "discontinuities," unless you want them for a particular reason. The sequence should be logical and make sense.
Then, of course, once you receive ATC clearance, make sure the flight plan you loaded into the FMS is consistent with that clearance.
e38