IFR cross-country planning and regulations
Lesson plan revised 19 March 2007; instrument theory.
Objective
The student should develop an understanding of cross-country planning and regulations applied to instrument flight.
Elements
- FARs
- Part 91 Subpart B
- Part 95
- IFR cross-country planning
- Weather
- Enroute charts
- Nav log preparation
- Lost communications procedures
Schedule
| Introduction | 05 |
| Main body | 60 |
| Application | 25 |
| Conclusion | 10 |
| Total | 1 hour 40 minutes |
Equipment
- pen and paper
- Instrument Flying Handbook and The Pilot’s Manual: Instrument Flying
- NACO enroute and approach charts
- nav logs
- laptop with flitestar and internet access
Instructor actions
- Compare and contrast instrument cross-country planning to visual
- Use FliteStar to show the selection of routes based on departure and arrival procedures
- Discuss weather information relevant to planning
- Describe night-before and day-of elements
- Difference between outlook and standard weather briefing
- Have the student present their route, with the first four navlog waypoints completed
- Conclude with an oral quiz, identifying and correcting errors
Student actions
- Arrive with completed route and navlog, including at least four waypoints
- Maintain active involvement by responding to questions and taking notes
- Complete an oral quiz and demonstration of the concepts
Completion standards
The lesson will be complete when the student can apply their knowledge of instrument flight planning to a cross-country route and identify elements of charts and regulations with minimal instructor guidance.
Teaching outline
Regulations
“Known icing conditions“
- Unless the aircraft is approved for flight into “known icing conditions” (note: not known ice), the FAA’s stance is very black and white.
- To quote FAA legal counsel:
- “Reduced to basic terms, known icing conditions exist where visible moisture or high relative humidity combines with temperatures near or below freezing. Since clouds are a form of visible moisture, flying through clouds at an altitude that is near or below freezing would constitute flight into known icing conditions.”
- “Flight into known icing conditions when the airplane flight manual or pilot operating handbook prohibits such flight would constitute a violation whether the aircraft accretes ice or not.”
- Airframe temperature may be below freezing when OAT is not, causing water droplets to accumulate as rime ice in temperatures above freezing.
91.121—Altimeter settings
- Altimeter must be set to:
- reported altimeter setting from a station within 100 nm along the route when below 18,000 ft MSL
- 29.92” Hg when at or above 18,000 ft MSL
91.167—Fuel requirements for flight in IFR conditions
- 45 minute fuel reserve should be carried
- enough fuel to fly to the destination, shoot the approach, and divert to the alternate without dipping into the reserve
- 1-2-3 rule allows us to eliminate the alternate fuel requirement:
- For at least 1 hour before, and for 1 hour after the estimated time of arrival, the ceiling will be at least 2,000 feet above the airport elevation and the visibility will be at least 3 statute miles.
- Required alternates must have approaches other than GPS available at the ETA.
91.177—Minimum altitudes for IFR operations
- Except when necessary for takeoff or landing, no person may operate an aircraft under IFR below minimum altitudes prescribed in parts 95 and 97 or, if no minimum altitude designated,
- over mountainous areas an altitude of 2,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown
- an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown
- If an MEA and MOCA are established, operations are permitted below the MEA but not below the MOCA when within 22 nm of the station
- Climb to a higher minimum altitude should begin immediately after passing the point beyond which that minimum altitude applies
- when ground obstructions are present, the point should be crossed at or above the applicable MCA
91.179—IFR cruising altitude or flight level
- When in controlled airspace, fly ATC assigned headings and altitudes
- if VFR on top, fly VFR cruising altitudes
- When in uncontrolled airspace, below 18,000 ft MSL, and on a course between:
- 0-179°, fly odd thousands
- 180-359°, fly even thousands
91.181—Course to be flown
- Fly the centerline of an airway, or on a direct course between navaids
- Maneuvering to avoid aircraft or to clear the flight path in VFR is permitted
95—IFR Altitudes
As defined in 95.1:
- MAA defines the upper limit of an airway
- MCA determines the lowest permitted altitude when crossing the waypoint or fix to a higher altitude segment
- MEA is the lowest altitude permitted on the entire route, airway, or segment
- MOCA provides safe obstacle clearance along the route or airway, but reception is only guaranteed within 25 nm of the station
- MRA is the lowest altitude at which an intersection can be determined using ground stations
- COP suggests the best point to switch to the next station along an airway, guaranteeing continuous reception between facilities
Mountainous areas are defined by latitude and longitude.
IFR cross-country planning
Materials should include: A/FD, enroute and area charts, departure procedures, STARs, and approach plates for the intended route of flight.
Weather
Get an IFR briefing from FSS or a DUAT provider, including:
- current and forecast conditions for departure, enroute, arrival, and alternate
- winds aloft
- ATC flow control
- NOTAMs
Enroute charts
- Use FliteStar to show Jeppesen format
- Compare to approach plates
Nav log preparation
- Take advantage of the FAA’s existing routes:
- start with a departure procedure
- find STARs, if available, or the best approach’s IAF
- connect the dots using airways
- ATC may assign a different route, if traffic is high
- Factor in any performance considerations
- climb rates
- winds aloft
- Determine cruising altitude using magnetic course and MEA
- Consider alternates enroute as well as at destination
Lost communications
- Route mnemonic:
- Assigned
- Vectored
- Expected
- Filed
- Altitude mnemonic:
- Minimum
- Expected
- Assigned