.
ROUGH ROAD becomes RROAD.
Copyright . The Boeing Company. See title page for details.
11.31.10 June 6, 2003
Flight Management, Navigation -Flight Management System Operation
737 Operations Manual
Unnamed Point Waypoint Names
Unnamed turn points, intersections, and DME fixes – if an unnamed turn point, intersection, or fix is collocated with a named waypoint or navaid on a different route structure (such as low altitude routes or an approach), the name or identifier of the collocated waypoint is used. Example:
. unnamed turn point on J2 between the Lake Charles (LCH) and New
Orleans (MSY) VORTACs is coincidental with the Lafayette (LFT) low
altitude VORTAC. LFT is used as the identifier for the turn point.
Identifier codes for unnamed turn points not coincidental with named waypoints are constructed from the identifier of a navaid serving the point and the distance from the navaid to the point. If the distance is 99 nautical miles or less, the navaid identifier is placed first, followed by the distance. If the distance is 100 nautical miles or more, the last two digits are used and placed ahead of the navaid identifier. Examples (NAVAID – DISTANCE – IDENT):
.
INW – 18 – INW18
.
CSN – 106 – 06CSN
.
TCS – 89 – TCS89.
Unnamed flight information region (FIR), upper flight information region (UIR), and controlled airspace reporting points – waypoints located at unnamed FIR, UIR, and controlled airspace reporting points are identified by the three–letter airspace type identification followed by a two–digit sequence number.
Unnamed oceanic control area reporting points – positions in the northern hemisphere use the letters N and E, while positions in the southern hemisphere use the letters S and W. Latitude always precedes longitude. For longitude, only the last two digits of the three digit value are used.
Placement of the designator in the five character set indicates whether the first longitude digit is 0 or 1. The letter is the last character if the longitude is less than 100° and is the third character if the longitude is 100° or greater.
N is used for north latitude, west longitude. E is used for north latitude, east longitude. S is used for south latitude, east longitude. W is used for south latitude, west longitude. Examples:
.
N50° W040° becomes 5040N . S52° W075° becomes 5275W
.
N75° W170° becomes 75N70 . S07° W120° becomes 07W20
.
N50° E020° becomes 5020E . S50° E020° becomes 5020S
.
N06° E110° becomes 06E10 . S06° E110° becomes 06S10.
Flight Management, Navigation -Flight Management System Operation 737 Operations Manual
Procedure Arc Fix Waypoint Names
Unnamed terminal area fixes along a DME arc procedure – unnamed fixes along a DME arc procedure are identified with the first character D. Characters 2 through 4 indicate the radial on which the fix lies. The last character indicates the arc radius. The radius is expressed by a letter of the alphabet where A = 1 mile, B = 2 miles, C = 3 miles, and so forth. Examples:
.
EPH252°/24 = D252X
.
EPH145°/24 = D145X
.
GEG006°/20 = D006T.
An unnamed waypoint along a DME arc with a radius greater than 26 miles is identified as an unnamed turn point that is not coincidental with a named waypoint. Examples:
.
CPR338°/29 = CPR29
.
GEG079°/30 = GEG30.
When there are multiple unnamed waypoints along a DME arc with a radius greater than 26 miles, the station identifier is reduced to two characters, followed by the radius, and then a sequence character. Examples:
.
CPR134°/29 = CP29A
.
CPR190° /29 = CP29B
.
CPR201°/29 = CP29C.
Procedure Fix Waypoint Names
Marker beacons – a marker beacon is identified by the marker type identifier followed by the runway number. Examples:
.
Outer Marker 13R = OM13R
.
Middle Marker 21 = MM21.
Runway–related fixes – waypoints located at unnamed runway–related fixes are identified by adding a two–letter prefix to the runway number. The following list is used to determine the appropriate prefix:
.
RX – runway extension fix . BM – back course marker
.
FA – VFR final approach fix . MD – minimum descent
.
CF – final approach course fix altitude
.
FF – final approach fix . A – (+ an alpha) step down fix
.
IF – initial approach fix . RW – runway threshold
中国航空网 www.aero.cn
航空翻译 www.aviation.cn
本文链接地址:737-300机组操作手册Flight Crew Operations Manual FCOM 3(39)