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Night Flying and the JAR Night Qualification

Night Flying and the JAR Night Qualification. SCOPE. What is night? The JAR Night Qualification Night Vision Aircraft and Aerodrome Lighting Night Flying Night Navigation. MORE INFORMATION. Trevor Thom Air Pilots Manual Volume 5. WHAT IS NIGHT?.

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Night Flying and the JAR Night Qualification

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  1. Night Flying and the JAR Night Qualification

  2. SCOPE • What is night? • The JAR Night Qualification • Night Vision • Aircraft and Aerodrome Lighting • Night Flying • Night Navigation

  3. MORE INFORMATION • Trevor Thom • Air Pilots Manual Volume 5

  4. WHAT IS NIGHT? • 30 minutes after sunset to 30 minutes before sunrise • Times in AIP Gen 2.7 on www.ais.org.uk and Flight Guides

  5. JAR NIGHT QUALIFICATION • Entitles PPL holder to act as PIC at Night • Passengers can be carried if during previous 90 days at least one take-off and landing has been completed at night (assuming the 3 t/o and ldg in 90 days for passenger carrying normally is current!) • Unless you hold a valid IR (not IMC!) • No retest or renewal criteria

  6. JAR NIGHT QUALIFICATION • 5 hours overall night training to include: • 3 hour dual night training • Including 1 hour dual night navigation • 5 take off and full stop landings at night as PIC of aeroplanes • NO TEST!!!

  7. The eye contains visual receptor cells called cones (daytime) and rods (nighttime). Eye requires about 30 minutes to adapt to dark. Depth perception, sharpness, and color is lost at night. The rods work best when you look off center at night.

  8. Red light improves adaptation but interferes with chart reading and focusing on outside objects. Use minimal white light as needed. Bright lights ruin dark adaptation (close one eye when a light is used). High altitudes (above 5,000 ft), smoking, carbon monoxide, and vitamin A deficiency impair dark adaptation.

  9. AIRCRAFT LIGHTING • Left wing RED • Right wing Green • Tail white • Anti-collision • Landing light

  10. Air Navigation Order Equipment requirements – External Lights Devices for signalling if non-radio Interior Lighting Electric torch for each crew member Landing Light

  11. . TAXIWAY LIGHTING • Taxiway edge lights = blue and are used to outline the edges of the taxiways at night or in reduced visibility conditions. • Centreline = green • Taxiway turn off lights are steady green and define the curved path from the centerline to the taxiway.

  12. Runway guard lights (wag lights) are steady yellow lights used to make the holding position more visible.

  13. Note the Hold position is marked by double lights on one side of the taxiway.

  14. RUNWAY LIGHTING • Threshold lights are green. • Runway edge lights are white. • Last 2,000 feet are yellow. • Runway end lightsare RED!!!!

  15. Lead in lights do not mark usable landing area – often outside airfield boundary

  16. PAPIs • PAPI lights are typically visible 5 miles from the airport during the day and 20 miles at night.

  17. VASIs • When using a 3-bar VASI and you see 2 red bars above 1 white bar. You are on the lower glide path. • The VASI assures clearance within 10 degrees of the extended runway centerline and out to 4 nautical miles from the threshold.

  18. NIGHT FLYING • Pre-Flight

  19. NIGHT FLYING • Pre-Flight • Weather – especially: cloud base, temp/dewpoint, wind • Torch x 2 – red filter, batteries • Diversions

  20. NIGHT FLYING • External Checks

  21. NIGHT FLYING • External Checks • Check for obstacles, all lights working • Use torch for external checks • Cockpit management crucial! • Takes time!

  22. NIGHT FLYING • Start-Up

  23. NIGHT FLYING • Start-Up • Park brake on (movement difficult to detect at night) • Anti-coll / Nav lights on to warn • Check alternator / ammeter • Adjust cockpit lighting to suitable levels

  24. NIGHT FLYING • Taxiing

  25. NIGHT FLYING • Taxiing • Distance / speed perception is poor! • Take your time and check route carefully • Instrument checks • Don’t blind other airfield users • If in doubt – STOP!!

  26. NIGHT FLYING • Take Off

  27. NIGHT FLYING • Take Off • The aircraft flys the same! • Check on centre line • Use runway edge lights to keep straight • On rotation transfer to instruments • When regain visual references transfer back (usually 3-400ft)

  28. NIGHT FLYING • Night Circuit

  29. NIGHT FLYING • Night Circuit • Beware tendency to over-bank • Use reference to runway lights and well lit ground features to position in the circuit • Wind variation usually greater at night

  30. NIGHT FLYING • Night Approach and Landing

  31. NIGHT FLYING • Night Approach and Landing • Use approach aids (PAPIs at Lyneham) • Use runway lights to judge round-out • DO NOT STARE AT LANDING LIGHT! • Progressive round-out and power reduction

  32. NIGHT FLYING • Emergencies • EFATO • Electrical Failure • Radio Failure

  33. NIGHT FLYING • Night Approach and Landing • Use approach aids (PAPIs at Lyneham) • Use runway lights to judge round-out • DO NOT STARE AT LANDING LIGHT! • Progressive round-out and power reduction

  34. NIGHT NAVIGATION • Ground Features- light patterns of towns • Distance deceptive • Radio Nav important • Forced landing? • No Night VFR – must fly IFR • Quadrantal Cruising Level above 3000’ AMSL • Safety Alt (1000’ above nearest obstacle within 5nm of track)

  35. Any Questions? Let’s get night qualified!

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