Pattern icons, Special waypoint identifiers – BendixKing KSN 770 - Pilots Guide User Manual
Page 354

KSN 765/770 Integrated Communication Navigation Display
D200802000009
REV 2 Jun 2014
15-81
Flight Management System (FMS)
Honeywell International Inc. Do not copy without express permission of Honeywell.
Pattern Icons
Pattern icons are used to indicate when a pattern exists on a waypoint.
Pattern icons include flyover waypoints, holds, arc turns, and procedure
turns.
Flyover Waypoint Indication -- When a
waypoint is a flyover waypoint (rather
than the more common fly--by waypoint)
and a turn must not be commenced prior
to flying over the waypoint, a white star
inside of a circle is displayed after the name of the waypoint. Flyover
waypoints are derived from navigation database loaded procedures
and cannot be entered by the pilot.
Hold Indication -- When a hold is
associated with a waypoint,
HLD
is
displayed after the name of the waypoint.
Arc Turn Indication -- When a waypoint
defines the beginning or end of an arc
turn (for example, a DME arc or a radial
to a fix),
ARC
is displayed after the
name of the waypoints that define the
beginning and end of the arc turn.
Procedure Turn Indication -- When a
waypoint requires a procedure turn,
PT
is displayed after the name of the
waypoint.
SPECIAL WAYPOINT IDENTIFIERS
Most flight plan legs consist of segments connecting airports, VORs,
intersections, or fixes easily and intuitively understood by the pilot
because they are straight lines (great circles) between two points.
Some flight plan legs are more complex, particularly sequences of legs
that are automatically called up from the navigation database and
populated into the waypoint list when a pilot chooses a SID, a STAR,
or an instrument approach. These legs are sometimes referred to as
special leg types. The following paragraphs describe the display of
these types of legs.