by skipsouthernsky » Sat Apr 28, 2012 8:52 am
Dear Al,
I know there are lots of ramifications to this. One of the selling points for the Aspen is it includes roll steering in the unit. As far as the ILS following goes, on my set-up, I have to turn roll steering off if following an ILS and "localizer" has to be selected on the auto pilot mode selector. The other question is what happens when using roll steering during an LPV approach? Don't know if you have that LPV capability or not. I'm using input from a GNS 480 (WASS) into the Aspen and then the autopilot hooked to the analog converter unit of the Aspen. It gets complicated and I tend to simplify the whole thing by just hand flying any approach that I shoot. I guess I don't trust the auto pilot when the chips are down and tolerances are tight. Fortunately that is a pretty rare occasion in my flying. The only time I play with the auto pilot and approaches is with an instructor flying practice approaches under the hood with VFR conditions. Believe me, that scenario is much more difficult and more of a learning experience than hand flying ever was.
For cruise, the auto pilot can do a good job of following a GPS course while the roll steering is on. It has always held heading and altitude if that was what was selected. But I think that is guided by the artificial horizon and an altitude pressure sensor along with the heading bug on the HSI. Like I say, there are a lot of complications there and it is easy to screw up one little thing on the set-up and then have the auto pilot not do exactly what you expect it to do. It is usually pilot induced error (at least in my case) or poor understanding of what controls what. Just like computers, garbage in-garbage out.
Sincerely,
Skip Dykema
Skip Dykema, ICS #3062
Comanche 180, Commercial-Instrument, SEL, MEL, A&P