Van Nuys ILS 16R
Flying|March 2018

Van Nuys ILS 16R

Rob Mark & Jason Blair
Van Nuys ILS 16R
Sitting just north of the Los Angeles Class B airspace, Van Nuys Airport, which is Class D, is one of the busiest in the United States, with a single set of parallel runways: the 8,001-by- 150-foot Runway 1/16 Right, and adjacent Runway 1/16 Left, at 4,013 by 75 feet. Last year, VNY logged just shy of 232,000 takeoffs and landings by a variety of helicopters and light piston airplanes, as well as single and multiengine turboprops and business jets.

This month’s chart, the VNY ILS Z Runway 16 Right, is one of 11 approaches to VNY, and one of two ILS approaches to the same runway.

Pilots can be excused for wondering why the airport offers a pair of nearly identical ILS approaches. The ILS Z offers straight-in minimums down to 300-foot ceilings and ¾-mile visibility, while the ILS Y approach, using the same gground-basedequipment, delivers minimums of 700 and 1½. To take advantage of the lower minimums, the ILS Z demands DME equipment aboard the aircraft, while the ILS Y does not.

A look at the missed-approach procedures, as well as the minimums, holds some of the answers to the procedural differences, some of which might make pilots from outside Southern California scratch their heads. The missed approach on the ILS Z approach is more complex than the ILS Y, including one note with an “at or below” restriction on the climb-out.

This story is from the March 2018 edition of Flying.

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This story is from the March 2018 edition of Flying.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.