Routes, Airways, and Charts Flashcards

1
Q

What are airways?

A

Highways of the sky, used by aircraft in controlled airspace to go point to point

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2
Q

What are air routes?

A

Used by aircraft in uncontrolled airspace to go point to point

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3
Q

What are low-level airway (LLA)?

A

Route within controlled low-level airspace (between 2200 feet AGL and 18,000 ft ASL)

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4
Q

What are the different types of low-level airways and air routes?

A
  • Victor airways
  • RNAV airways
  • T-routes
  • L-routes
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5
Q

What are high-level airway (HLA)?

A

Prescribed track between specified fixes in controlled high-level airspace

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6
Q

What are the different types of high-level airways and air routes?

A
  • Jet airways
  • Q-routes
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7
Q

What are the designated areas of controlled airspace?

A
  • Control Zones
  • Terminal Control Areas
  • Control Area Extensions
  • Transition Areas
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8
Q

What are control zones?

A

Designated areas around certain aerodromes; radius usually 5, 7, and 10 NM and usually 3000 feet AAE

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9
Q

What are terminal control areas?

A

Exist at high-volume airports to provide ATC service to arriving, departing, and enroute aircraft

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10
Q

What are control area extensions (CAE)?

A

Established at some busy airports where controlled airspace insufficient to permit required separation between IFR arrivals and departures

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11
Q

What are transitions areas?

A

Established when it is advantageous or necessary to provide additional controlled airspace for containment of IFR operations

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12
Q

How many different minimum IFR altitudes are there and what are they?

A
  • 8 kinds
  • Minimum obstacle clearance altitude (MOCA)
  • Minimum reception altitude (MRA)
  • Minimum enroute altitude (MEA)
  • Minimum sector altitude (MSA)
  • Minimum vectoring altitude (MVA)
  • Safe altitude 100 NM
  • Area minimum altitude (AMA)
  • Transition altitude
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13
Q

What is MOCA?

A

Minimum obstacle clearance altitude - lowest altitude an aircraft can clear an obstacle on the airways or air routes

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14
Q

What is MRA?

A

Minimum reception altitude - lowest altitude that will allow you to reception altitude aircraft needs to receive NAVAID they are going towards

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15
Q

What is MVA?

A

Minimum vectoring altitude - seen in terminal environment, this is the minimum altitude for vectoring an aircraft

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16
Q

What is MEA?

A

Minimum ennroute altitude - lowest altitude for obstacle clearance and reception of NAVAIDs on an airway (combination of MOCA and MRA)

17
Q

What is MSA?

A

Minimum sector altitude - lowest altitude that provide minimum clearance of 1000 ft under conditions of standard temperature and pressure in the sector

18
Q

What is safe altitude 100 NM?

A

Lowest altitude that provide minimum clearance of 1000 feet above all obstacles within 100 NM of aerodrome

19
Q

What is AMA?

A

Area minimum altitude - lowest altitude that provides minimum vertical clearance of 1000 feet above all obstacles located in area specified

20
Q

What is transition altitude?

A

Highest altitude which vertical position of aircraft expressed in feet

21
Q

What are SIDs?

A

Standard Instrument Departures - there are two types: pilot navigation and vector; published and provides altitude and lateral guidance that the aircraft will fly; transition between departure and enroute phase of flight

22
Q

What are STARs?

A

Standard Terminal Arrival - transition from enroute to approach phase of flight; lines them up for final but are not cleared to land as they do not know the lateral altitude for landing and the active runways

23
Q

How many commonly used charts are used in operations and what are they?

A
  • 6 types of charts
  • VFR aeronatutical charts
  • Canada Air Pilot (CAP)
  • Terminal charts
  • Enroute low altitude charts (LO charts)
  • Enroute high altitude charts (HI charts)
  • Canada Flight Supplement (CFS)
24
Q

What are the three different types of VFR aeronautical charts?

A
  • VFR Terminal Area Charts (VTAs)
  • VFR Navigation Charts (VNCs)
  • World Aeronautical Charts (WACs)
25
Q

What are VTAs used for and what information do they provide?

A

Provides detailed information operating in busy terminal areas and allows VFR pilots to navigate more precisely in terminal area

26
Q

What are VNCs used for?

A

Provide navigation information to pilots during enroute portion of VFR flight

27
Q

What are WACs used for?

A

Used for flight planning and in-flight navigation on extended cross-country flights at low-to-medium altitudes and medium-to-high airspeed

28
Q

What information does the CAP provide?

A

Provides aeronautical information primarily related to IFR arrival or departure phases of flight

29
Q

How often are the CAP updated?

A

Every 56 days

30
Q

What are terminal charts?

A

Enroute charts that provide IFR pilots with navigational information in busy terminal environments

31
Q

What are LO charts?

A

Provide navigation information for IFR flights in low-level airspace

32
Q

What are HI charts?

A

Provide pilots with navigational information required to navigate higher altitudes

33
Q

What is the CFS?

A

Joint civilian-military publication that contains information on Canadian and North Atlantic aerodromes

34
Q

How often is the CFS issued?

A

Every 56 days