Hi Vic,I'm sorry that it has taken me so long to reply. I've had a busy month.
I have indeed flown in there and it is one of the few airports where a visual approach is more difficult than the instrument approach.
As you probably know, you approach on a base leg to the runway aiming at a big billboard. The problem is that the base leg must be flown so close into the airport that the final is very short. Compounding this is the fact that there is almost a right crosswind. As you are on a right base that right crosswind on final is a tailwind on base. This tends to make you overshoot the final which you must not do. Because of all the above the approach is often not too stablized which is pretty important in heavy jets. You are often rolling wings level on final at just a feww hundred feet, this in an aircraft with a 195 foot wingspan!
All that being said though, the landing at Kai Tak was hotly fought over because it was such a challange. After all, that's why we became pilots wasn't it?
Mark
Hi Mark - No problem - I understand how it goes.
I've watched several different videos of some of the landings and it amazes me how nimble a 747 can be. I guess the classic is the Korean Air 747 that comes over the numbers at about a 30 - 45 degree crab - slams the rudder and straightens out just as the mains hit. I'd love a challenge like that.
Out of curiosity, did pilots have to have sim time on that approach before tackling it for real or did they just get thrown to the wolves.
I guess the other approach that gives me a kick to see is the St.Martens approach just over the beach. Talk about kicking sand in your face...
Thanx,
Vic
> Hi Vic,
>
> I'm sorry that it has taken me so long to reply. I've had a busy month.
> I have indeed flown in there and it is one of the few airports where a
> visual approach is more difficult than the instrument approach.
> As you probably know, you approach on a base leg to the runway aiming at
> a big billboard. The problem is that the base leg must be flown so close
> into the airport that the final is very short. Compounding this is the
> fact that there is almost a right crosswind. As you are on a right base
> that right crosswind on final is a tailwind on base. This tends to make
> you overshoot the final which you must not do. Because of all the above
> the approach is often not too stablized which is pretty important in
> heavy jets. You are often rolling wings level on final at just a feww
> hundred feet, this in an aircraft with a 195 foot wingspan!
> All that being said though, the landing at Kai Tak was hotly fought over
> because it was such a challange. After all, that's why we became pilots
> wasn't it?
>
> Mark
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