New helipad approach
system improves low-vis safety (Australia)
An EC145 landing at the newly upgraded helipad. (Eurocopter)
An EC145 landing at the newly upgraded helipad. (Eurocopter)
Eurocopter has commissioned a high precision GPS-supported instrument approach procedure for the helipad at its corporate headquarters at Donauwörth in Germany, becoming the first helipad in Europe to make use of Localiser Performance with Vertical (LPV) guidance.
The new procedure supplements conventional lateral guidance systems by adding the vertical component, which enables approach guidance to be displayed in 3D for the first time. The improved guidance enables obstacles to be overflown with increased safety when visibility is poor.
The license permitting LPV approaches to the helipad also means Eurocopter in Donauwörth can use the new procedure when testing and approving the latest navigation systems for use in its helicopters. Eurocopter is currently conducting these tests using its twin-engine EC135 and EC145 T2 helicopters. Eurocopter will offer training to its customers for the new system
Eurocopter's special on-site helicopter landing pad, which welcomes some 6,000 take-offs and landings a year, is one of the few helipads in the world to have been certified as suitable for all-weather operations in line with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) requirements.
Her er samme sak sett med AIN`s øyne:
Eurocopter Leads on Helipad LPV Approaches in EuropeEurocopter obtained the first license in Europe permitting localizer-performance with vertical guidance (LPV) approaches on a helipad, at its development and production facility in Donauwörth, Germany. The helicopter manufacturer emphasized that such a procedure improves safety in poor visibility, since aircraft can overfly obstacles more safely. According to Eurocopter, it can now use the new procedure when testing navigation systems. The company is currently doing so on the EC135 and the in-development EC145T2 light twins. In addition, Eurocopter offers its customers training courses for the new system. The LPV instrument procedure is based on the European Geostationary Navigation Overlapping Service (Egnos), a GPS augmentation system that is the counterpart of the U.S. Waas. Eurocopter claims its Donauwörth helipad, which handles 6,000 aircraft movements annually, is “one of the few helipads in the world to have been certified as suitable for all-weather operations in line with ICAO requirements.” The manufacturer also said new landing procedures, relying on Egnos, are allowing smaller noise footprints at its headquarters in Marignane, France.
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