Ian Warren wrote:Nice one Gary , I tried the HU and you can land on a teaspoon using it,
Challenge accepted ! :-) As before these are just rather big thumbnails, click to get the full version if you want a better look at the displays.
I think I have mentioned that the silliest thing I've ever done in flight sim was to land a 767 on CYCG Castlegar runway 33, so it seemed like a good place to revisit. There are
some IVAO approach charts here if you want to have a go, although they won't help - the only approaches are for runway 15, because you'd basically have to be completely bonkers to even think about coming in the other way.
It was a fine sunny morning when the bonkers express left Vancouver

and turned south towards Friday Harbour hoping to scare the bejeezus out of some noob in a microlight.

Microlights were thin on the air though so I pointed the nose to the East

and set course for Castlegar.

It was a brilliant day for touring

but all too soon the ND suggested that it was soon going to get interesting.

It wasn't kidding. Far too soon for my nerves we arrived over Castlegar which promptly vanished behind a cloud. That was ok, but I'd quite liked to have still been able to see the mountains ...

We turned to follow the valley, still letting the autopilot follow the magenta line. None of the intersections on the charts are in the NGX database so I'd had to enter them all as position waypoints, I was impressed that it was working so well.

We've gone far enough downwind, now it's time to turn base. Note the vertical profile on the FO's ND which I've cloned on what is normally the engine instruments screen. If it had been of any use (a.k.a. if we'd been doing something even slightly sane) I'd have brought it up on mine too, but because of the interesting nature of this arrival it wasn't much help. It looks flash though so I left it there :-)

Notice the big yellow patch of terrain out of the left window on that last shot ? I picked a bad time to turn base, nearly flying straight into it. Suddenly it went from yellow to red and every possible alarm went off. I yanked the yoke over which disconned the autopilot (adding yet another alarm) but it did the job and I managed to fly around the hill instead of into it.

About now I figured that since this was all about the HUGS (doesn't that sound all warm and friendly LOL) I should flip it down, so I did, and everything got a lot easier. Not because I didn't have to look down at the instruments, but because of that circle that tells me where I'm actually going. In this case its telling me I'm going over the ridge instead of through it which is perfect, all I have to do is keep the circle just above the ridge and we'll be sweet. The circle is actually called Flight Path Symbol (not the flight path vector, that's what it displays). I'll keep calling it a circle, it's shorter :-)

Damn the alarms, damn the PULL UP warnings, damn the huge splashes of red on the terrain display, damn the radio altimter and it's scaremongering 530 feet, I'm descending at 900 fpm and the circle is above the ridge and all is good in the world.

Quick check - one more ridge to go, and the track actually looks like I thought it would. And given I've been hand flying since the left turn away from the river it's remarkably straight !

The problem with performing a completely visual approach to a shy airport hiding behind a hill is that you don't know exactly where it is until you get onto the same side of the hill. You may well find it's not where you thought. Oops !

Not a problem for the bonkers express though, we'll just drop the circle on the corner of the airfield and sit back and relax

while the passengers on their way to roaring fires in ski lodges gather some firewood - after all we are only 250' AGL ...

Still on course for the correct bit of the airfield, and now with 600' under the wheels. The ground must have dropped even more sharply than I am :-)

Eventually it's time to begin the turn to line up

There is the ridge we just came over at 250' !

The circle is bang on where I want it

and so is the plane. Flaring is for pussies.

Actually I probably should have flared a bit as it was definitely more of an arrival than a landing. But even after the huge bounce, with max autobrakes and reversers down to 60 kts I stopped before the last turnoff. In this shot the plane is stationary on the runway (probably waiting for the firemen to inspect the brakes).

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bonkers Express ...

... has arrived.

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