Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
The purpose of an instrument let-down is to bring an aircraft past all hills and obstructions to a particular position at low height. If the pilot follows the correct procedure, the aircraft will obviously clear the hills and obstructions. But owing to various interruptions and distractions, difficulties of reception or the need to give partial attention to other duties, he is often unable to follow the procedure exactly; he will then want to know whether departure from the procedure requires immediate rectification, or whether he is at liberty to return gradually to the correct path. A badly working radio aid, or some other difficulty, may make it necessary to abandon a partly completed approach; he will then want to know the best way to extricate his aircraft from a possibly dangerous situation. Furthermore, the pilot often has to improvise an ‘intermediate procedure’, to connect between his arrival over the aerodrome and the beginning of the let-down. For these reasons he needs to know the positions of the hills and obstructions in relation to the let-down; and the only way to present this information to him quickly and unambiguously is by making hills and obstructions the principal features of let-down charts. The local knowledge possessed by pilots of scheduled services does not lessen the need for an effective presentation of this feature on the charts, as it is precisely when landing at unfamiliar aerodromes that the charts will be most used.