KL-666 wrote:
AFAIK, OEV west is deprecated since they ditched the old ww2 props. So, i'm sorry chap, i'll have to come in east with my modern 777. Both rw's are accessible from that side, and a bit of x-wind has never hurt anyone. Actually, i doubt if you will ever get that kind of x-wind there, because it would be completely cross the valley embanked with high mountains.
And i certainly will not go through time consuming video making, for nothing interesting at all.
Kind regards, Vincent
Well, austro control [1] still publishes the charts for LOC DME WEST [2] so it certainly still exists.
Actually, i doubt if you will ever get that kind of x-wind there, because it would be completely cross the valley embanked with high mountains.
As for crosswinds, they are frequent enough and strong enough that austro control provides specific instructions for the conditions. [3] See 2.3.2, 2.9 and 3.1.2 (f). In the same document at 3.4 you can once again get the procedures for LOC DME WEST.
You can also watch some landings on youtube if you still don't believe that x-winds exist here
During FOEHN conditions (surface
wind 100°-180°, average windspeed 15-
25kt, gusts 30-50kt) severe turbulence
associated with horizontal windshears
and severe downdraughts at all altitudes.
So, in conclusion, of course if you set the weather nice and take the easy approach (with an easy plane) then LOWI is not much more challenging than a regular approach.
But if you take the hard approach (even without wind), it's quite challenging = it's a lot of fun, IMHO.
To each his own; whatever makes you happy
Kind Regards,
MD-GRK (Phil)
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austro_Control
[2] http://eaip.austrocontrol.at/lo/160527/ad_2_lowi.htm
[3] https://eaip.austrocontrol.at/lo/161208/PART_3/AD_2/PRI/AD_2_LOWI/LO_AD_2_LOWI_en.pdf