VOR navigation question

Flyingfanatic

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Flying Fanatic
Without GPS or radar vectors, can you navigate from an airport to an intersection on a VOR airway or just to the airway itself without first going to a VOR?

I think the answer is no, because you don’t have positive navigation guidance. But I’m not sure.

If I want to depart an airport and join an airway, my understanding is I need to go to the VOR first, absent any radar vectors or GPS navigation.

Is there a way to file radar vectors to an intersection? So if I want to depart the airport and get vectors to an intersection, I can ask for that in the flight plan?
 
You can intercept the radial the Victor airway is on.

This is basic ppl stuff, there are some good videos on yt that show how to do it. Watch those, and some time with a cfi wouldn't hurt either.
 
You can intercept the radial the Victor airway is on.

This is basic ppl stuff, there are some good videos on yt that show how to do it. Watch those, and some time with a cfi wouldn't hurt either.

The question is about how to file it in an IFR flight plan.
 
Sure, you can file direct to an intersection. If the intersection is at the cross radials, you can use two VOR receivers to get there directly. If it is a DME fix from one station, that may be a bit harder.
You can file radar vectors, assuming you will be above the vectoring altitude.
Basically, you can file whatever you want. But the question is would you be able to fly the filed route if things go south?
 
Without GPS or radar vectors, can you navigate from an airport to an intersection on a VOR airway or just to the airway itself without first going to a VOR?

I think the answer is no, because you don’t have positive navigation guidance. But I’m not sure.

If I want to depart an airport and join an airway, my understanding is I need to go to the VOR first, absent any radar vectors or GPS navigation.

Is there a way to file radar vectors to an intersection? So if I want to depart the airport and get vectors to an intersection, I can ask for that in the flight plan?
You can Dead Reckon towards the Intersection and then when you get close and the Needles start moving, do your intercept of the radial from there. If they give you that Intersection as the first Fix on your Route, how you get there is up to you unless they give you specific Departure Instructions. While you can put 'REQUEST VECTORS' in Remarks, there is not a way to put it in the Route, that I know of. Whether you'll get them or not, you'll find out when you get your Clearance
 
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That was the second question. The first one was about navigating to the Intersection.

If you can do it legally IFR. Not how. I'd imagine that a CFI knows how to use a VOR.
 
Sure, you can file direct to an intersection. If the intersection is at the cross radials, you can use two VOR receivers to get there directly.
IMO, not really. Trying to bring in two VOR needles which can have individual errors of up to 4 degrees so the meet at exactly the same time may be a nice idea but ultimately it's point-to-point navigation which, in the modern NAS, requires RNAV capability. I spent a little time looking into this for my IFR Magazine article on IFR dead reckoning.
 
The question is about how to file it in an IFR flight plan.

Lol, missed which forum this is and that he is a cfi. I would file to the vor, then continue from there, if you have a single vor. It's getting harder and harder to use vors around here, they are decommissioning most of them. If you have two, you can file to an intersection that has cross radials charted. You can also use dme if you have that.

I've never filed asking for radar vectors, not sure if that would work, but you can certainly ask when you get your clearance.
 
Without GPS or radar vectors, can you navigate from an airport to an intersection on a VOR airway or just to the airway itself without first going to a VOR?

I think the answer is no, because you don’t have positive navigation guidance. But I’m not sure.

If I want to depart an airport and join an airway, my understanding is I need to go to the VOR first, absent any radar vectors or GPS navigation.

Is there a way to file radar vectors to an intersection? So if I want to depart the airport and get vectors to an intersection, I can ask for that in the flight plan?
You are correct, unless, of course, you happen to be on the airway. File and plan to navigate to a VOR on the airway. Hopefully, once in contact with ATC, they will give you a vector to join. Feel free to ask.
 
IMO, not really. Trying to bring in two VOR needles which can have individual errors of up to 4 degrees so the meet at exactly the same time may be a nice idea but ultimately it's point-to-point navigation which, in the modern NAS, requires RNAV capability. I spent a little time looking into this for my IFR Magazine article on IFR dead reckoning.
BTW, the article is here but it's a subscription-required one.
 
I deal with this at San Diego Brown Field every time. Going to Phx, the first fix I file is the nearby VOR, Poggi (PGY).

What I actually get is: on departure turn heading 280, radar vectors for PGY. The have me fly West so as to gain some altitude before turning me East into the terrain of Otay Mountain.

I'd love to be able to actually file the Radar Vectors portion of the clearance so that I could achieve the hallowed "Cleared as Filed" - but it'll never happen.
 
BTW, the article is here but it's a subscription-required one.
I'm sure you covered DR legs on approaches. What about MEA Gaps? They've gotten rid of a lot Victor airways over the last few years. Are there any of those left? On the RNAV required for point to point navigation, yeah for Waypoint to Waypoint. But I'm not seeing that as always being required from Departure Airport to first Fix, the OP's scenario.

EDIT: Found one. V134 between PUC and YMONT
 
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You are correct, unless, of course, you happen to be on the airway. File and plan to navigate to a VOR on the airway. Hopefully, once in contact with ATC, they will give you a vector to join. Feel free to ask.


This is exactly what I was thinking, but I wanted confirmation.

Thank you!
 
I deal with this at San Diego Brown Field every time. Going to Phx, the first fix I file is the nearby VOR, Poggi (PGY).

What I actually get is: on departure turn heading 280, radar vectors for PGY. The have me fly West so as to gain some altitude before turning me East into the terrain of Otay Mountain.

I'd love to be able to actually file the Radar Vectors portion of the clearance so that I could achieve the hallowed "Cleared as Filed" - but it'll never happen.
"...turning me East OVER the terrain of Otay Mountain..." FTFY:goofy:
 
IMO, not really. Trying to bring in two VOR needles which can have individual errors of up to 4 degrees so the meet at exactly the same time may be a nice idea but ultimately it's point-to-point navigation which, in the modern NAS, requires RNAV capability. I spent a little time looking into this for my IFR Magazine article on IFR dead reckoning.

I didn't say it was easy. When flying direct to an intersection of two VORs, you are flying inside a narrowing cone of airspace that becomes a point at the intersection. The angle of the cone depends on the angle defined by the VOR radials. The father you are from the intersection, the wider the cone, and that could potentially place you outside the protected airspace. But if you combine it with a computed heading, assuming there are no howling winds or mountains in the way, I wouldn't be too worried about flying it. If you have RNAV, then of course it is a no brainer.
 
Although not used in an actual flight plan, in the old days we had a training exercise to fly to an intersection of two VOR radials and hold on one of the radials. The process was to intercept one of the radials with a 90 degree intercept and then figure out which way to turn on that radial to get to the intersection. No moving map, unless you dropped your map on the floor. No RNAV, couldn't even spell it. This was before even the KNS80, just a couple of KX170B and before transponders were required.
 
You can still get cleared as filed, even if you join the route via vectors, a few waypoints, or a SID. "Example: Cleared to Reynolds Airport; David Two Departure, Kingham Transition; then, as filed." How you join the route can be part of the clearance and from that point cleared as filed or rest of route unchanged, example “Cessna Two One Alfa cleared via Victor Forty−One Frank, Victor Seventy−One Delta, rest of route unchanged.”
 
I'm sure you covered DR legs on approaches. What about MEA Gaps? They've gotten rid of a lot Victor airways over the last few years. Are there any of those left? On the RNAV required for point to point navigation, yeah for Waypoint to Waypoint. But I'm not seeing that as always being required from Departure Airport to first Fix, the OP's scenario.

EDIT: Found one. V134 between PUC and YMONT
Yep, I discussed both. Also DR segments on ODPs, published visual segments on final approach courses (technically visual but designed for dead reckoning), and dead reckoning legs on ODPs. Gave honorable mention to the death of TACAN point-to-point in the NAS.
 
I didn't say it was easy.
I didn't say it was hard. The old Brown Book Flight Guides use to give intersecting radials for airport locations. I used to use those at night all the time, even before I got my instrument rating.

What I did say is that it is not part of IFR navigation in the NAS in 2021. If you think it is, let me ask this: what the the RNP value using dual VOR homing as a primary means of RNAV navigation? Is it "suitable RNAV equipment" under FAR 91.205 and 1.1?
 
I guess I can. When I got my instrument rating Dead Reckoning appropriate for IFR navigation was requirement under 61.65(b). Used to file to an intersection on an airway as the first fix, but it also was like eight mile from the departure airport.
 
I guess I can. When I got my instrument rating Dead Reckoning appropriate for IFR navigation was requirement under 61.65(b). Used to file to an intersection on an airway as the first fix, but it also was like eight mile from the departure airport.
I always wondered why they got rid of it considering the continued existence of MEA gaps and other published DR legs. Maybe they just figured it wasn't "normal" anymore (I'm sure it was at one time) and was just part of reading and understanding the charts where they appeared.
 
Sure why not file direct to KMAN to Emett, as long as I can meet the 91.177(a)(2) altitudes before I go IMC.

upload_2021-10-17_21-20-55.png

Pull out my sectional chart and plot a course to Emett, Private Pilot Navigation 101. Intercept the Airway and proceed on course NW.

Only navigation equipment required is a VOR receiver.

Brian
 
Considering MON coming they ought to bring it back because without the magenta line most would be lost.
MON navigation will probably be a combination of RADAR, VOR to VOR, and radial to radial intersections, not dead reckoning or triangulation.

A non radar vectored, non GPS instruction in @Flyingfanatic's scenario would be direct to a VOR to join the airway not direct to an RNAV-required waypoint on the airway. IMO, the removal of DR as a regular primary method of enroute navigation is akin to the removal of most enroute uncontrolled airspace. A combination of better equipment and more traffic. The remaining DR legs in the NAS are all pretty limited in distance and I expect to see MEA gaps disappearing as Victor airways get replaced by T routes.
 
Sure why not file direct to KMAN to Emett, as long as I can meet the 91.177(a)(2) altitudes before I go IMC.

Brian
Don't forget to meet the 91.205 and 1.1 requirements for RNAV IFR navigation too.
 
If I want to depart an airport and join an airway, my understanding is I need to go to the VOR first, absent any radar vectors or GPS navigation.
HUH? People join airways without going to the defining VOR all the time. It's just done based on some other form of navigation (possibly being on the radial of some other VOR).
 
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Sure why not file direct to KMAN to Emett, as long as I can meet the 91.177(a)(2) altitudes before I go IMC.

View attachment 101049

Pull out my sectional chart and plot a course to Emett, Private Pilot Navigation 101. Intercept the Airway and proceed on course NW.

Only navigation equipment required is a VOR receiver.

Brian
IMC has nothing to do with it.
 
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MON navigation will probably be a combination of RADAR, VOR to VOR, and radial to radial intersections, not dead reckoning or triangulation.

A non radar vectored, non GPS instruction in @Flyingfanatic's scenario would be direct to a VOR to join the airway not direct to an RNAV-required waypoint on the airway. IMO, the removal of DR as a regular primary method of enroute navigation is akin to the removal of most enroute uncontrolled airspace. A combination of better equipment and more traffic. The remaining DR legs in the NAS are all pretty limited in distance and I expect to see MEA gaps disappearing as Victor airways get replaced by T routes.

My point is the MON service altitude is 5000 ft and there are still some areas of the country where a departing aircraft that loses GPS may also be below an altitude for communications.
 
HUH? People join airways without going to the defining VOR all the time. It's just done based on some other form of navigation (possibly being on the radial of some other VOR).
“Without GPS” is what I said. Obviously I can navigate to an intersection if I’m on an airway or established radial.
 
“Without GPS” is what I said. Obviously I can navigate to an intersection if I’m on an airway or established radial.
GPS has nothing to do with it. And while it is OBVIOUS (which is why the "Huh?") That's not what you said. And you don't even need to be on an airway or established radial. I've gotten clearances that involve taking off and intercepting an airway.
 
IMO, not really. Trying to bring in two VOR needles which can have individual errors of up to 4 degrees so the meet at exactly the same time may be a nice idea but ultimately it's point-to-point navigation which, in the modern NAS, requires RNAV capability. I spent a little time looking into this for my IFR Magazine article on IFR dead reckoning.

I think you mean, "You can, but you risk a potential pilot deviation en-route due to the inherit inaccuracies using a dual VOR to effectively triangulate a GPS waypoint." Right? I mean I don't know of any FAR that precludes identifying a GPS waypoint using ground-based NAVIADs. Provided you have confidence in your dual VOR setup, I see no reason why you couldn't use them to track and identify (I agree, it could be very difficult depending on context).

Btw, Mark, great article. I read it when it came out. Really, well done.
 
I think you mean, "You can, but you risk a potential pilot deviation en-route due to the inherit inaccuracies using a dual VOR to effectively triangulate a GPS waypoint." Right? I mean I don't know of any FAR that precludes identifying a GPS waypoint using ground-based NAVIADs. Provided you have confidence in your dual VOR setup, I see no reason why you couldn't use them to track and identify (I agree, it could be very difficult depending on context).

Btw, Mark, great article. I read it when it came out. Really, well done.
Thanks you. Appreciate it.

I guess I mean the difference between "you can" and "you may."

While the regs and guidance may leave some arguable wiggle room, I think (assuming no vectoring) that while Airplane A is permitted to fly IFR Direct BREDY with even a single VOR, airplane B requires some form of approved RNAV capability.
upload_2021-10-18_13-2-48.png
 
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Yeah, totally agree. Though again, what FAR actually doesn't allow plane B to estimate the radial that perhaps intersects it (not a Victor) and use that to track inbound? I mean it's not like ATC is really going to say, "Hey Mark, you're 2 degrees off, say intentions." LOL.

However, realistically, ATC would never give plane B direct BREDY if you didn't file the equivalent of '/G' etc. so I certainly agree with your overall sentiments about this scenario (as well as the NAS being RNAV driven).
 
Don't forget to meet the 91.205 and 1.1 requirements for RNAV IFR navigation too.

FAR 1.1 "performance criteria (including accuracy) established by the air navigation service provider for certain routes"

I only need to meet RNAV requirement if there are RNAV requirements specified for the route.
or I am missing something else the prevents me just flying to heading to intercept an airway which in reality is what I am doing. I could probably just file KMAN MH340 to V4.

Brian
 
FAR 1.1 "performance criteria (including accuracy) established by the air navigation service provider for certain routes"

I only need to meet RNAV requirement if there are RNAV requirements specified for the route.
or I am missing something else the prevents me just flying to heading to intercept an airway which in reality is what I am doing. I could probably just file KMAN MH340 to V4.

Brian
Completely different question, Nothing prevents you from accepting a vector to intercept an airway. The airway itself is defined by VOR. Fly the instructed heading until the needle comes in and intercept. Just as valid today as 30 years ago.

OTOH, "point to point" self-navigation is RNAV.
 
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