Try GOLD - Free
The Glideslope
Flying
|October 2021
When you see what you expect to see

It was 2001, and an IFR-approved panel-mounted GPS had just been installed in my airplane, a Cessna 180. I was anxious to see it in action with its moving map, a multitude of functions, and the information it provided. A short 20-minute flight to a nearby airport for breakfast with a friend and some hands-on use of the new equipment was in order. The weather at the breakfast airport that morning was not VFR because there was a low marine stratus layer. The AWOS reported instrument conditions, with a 300-foot overcast but reasonable visibility of 4 miles below the cloud deck. Because I pride myself by staying instrument current, this would help me stay that way.
The airport is served by an ILS (with 200-foot and half-mile minimums), and the local approach controller can give vectors for the approach, though they lose radar coverage around the final approach fix.
I asked the controller for the approach using a pop-up clearance, and I quickly received one with assigned altitudes and headings. As I entered the clouds, the GPS provided course information to the airport. I completed the before-landing checklist; verified the settings on the radios, knobs, and switches for the approach; and listened to the Morse-code identifier for the ILS to verify that the approach frequency was properly identified. I reviewed the approach plate one more time.
I loaded the approach into the GPS—albeit this would be a backup to the primary navigation instrument, an HSI that would be presenting localizer and glideslope information from the ILS transmitter. The only new piece of equipment installed was the GPS; the rest of the radios had been in place for years and worked well. I enjoyed the tracking of the flight on the GPS’s moving-map display, and I wondered how I had managed to fly 40 years without one.
This story is from the October 2021 edition of Flying.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Flying

Flying
The Temple of Speed
Reno entices even this altitude-oriented pilot.
6 mins
December 2021

Flying
Flat Sixes
Fanatical artisans
5 mins
December 2021

Flying
Blue over Green, Tent in Between
I’m old , I’m cranky. Why do I keep air-camping?
5 mins
December 2021

Flying
Gulfstream Reveals G400, G800
The product lineup gains large-cabin and ultralong-range mounts.
3 mins
December 2021

Flying
Every Airplane Requires a Checkout
Embrace the challenge of mastering a new machine.
3 mins
December 2021

Flying
Fuhggedaboutit
Fifty-plus years of f lying forgetfulness
4 mins
December 2021

Flying
THE MAULE FAMILY APPROACHABLE AIRCRAFT
Choose your mount —the Maules do it all.
9 mins
December 2021

Flying
Sisters
“ Women certainly have the courage and tenacity required for long flights.” —Mildred Doran
5 mins
December 2021

Flying
INSIDE OUT OR OUTSIDE IN?
What kind of pilot should you be?
5 mins
December 2021

Flying
WE FLY: CESSNA CITATION CJ4 GEN2
THE FLAGSHIP CJ JUST GOT A WHOLE LOT BETTER.
15 mins
December 2021
Translate
Change font size