Aviation Specials – May 2018

(Frankie) #1
Extreme Airports // 83

are complex by commercial standards,
they are not quite as challenging as they
might appear to the laymen. The high
ground demands careful navigation, but
TGU’s minimum sector altitudes (MSAs)
are somewhat lower than Innsbruck (see
P16) or Bogotá in Colombia. Furthermore,
many other airfi elds used by jet traffi c
have shorter runways, including Santos
Dumont in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is a
combination of the two that has earned
the facility its notoriety.
Runway 02 and 20 both have
instrument-based VOR / DME (VHF
omnidirectional range / distance
measuring equipment) approaches,
but there is no ILS (instrument landing
system) at either end. Take-offs and
landings are normally on Runway 02
due to the prevailing winds and lower
mountains on its extended centreline,

while departures off Runway 20 are very
rare because of performance limitations
and climb gradients.
The most dramatic arrival is onto Runway


  1. It has initial approach paths from the
    north and south, with the former used
    more regularly because it is not close to
    the mountains. The simpler straight-in
    procedure for Runway 02 has a missed
    approach point at 5,600ft, after which a
    very steep descent of 2,300ft over 2nm is
    necessary. Alternatively, crews may elect
    to fl y a 118o heading from the Toncontín
    VOR navigation beacon, and then make a
    360 o circle at low level before landing.
    The northerly approach, known
    unoffi cially as the Periférico 1 Arrival, has
    an even higher decision point at 6,000ft,
    and consists of a series of turns around
    visual reference
    points. Pilots initially


fl y inbound to a point 1.5nm just from the
threshold of Runway 20, then make a
20 o right turn to enter the left downwind
for Runway 02. Three airport guidance
lights (AGLs) provide markers for the next
phase of the approach. The fi rst is west
of the runway on the peak of a 5,000ft
mountain and after crossing it a descent
to 4,700ft must be initiated with visual
reference to the Represa Los Laureles
(Los Laureles Dam) and the Anillo
Periférico (Tegucigalpa’s outer ring road).
The highway has to be kept on the left at
all times. Then, a left turn onto base leg is
initiated at between 4,500ft and 4,300ft
over the Las Uvas neighbourhood, where
there is a second AGL. Continuing
the left turn and the descent,
with the road still on the
left, the third AGL has
to be overfl own at

TEGUCIGALPA


ABOVE LEFT: A
Copa Airlines
Embraer 190 makes
an approach to the
north.
ABOVE: The
runway length is
limited due to a
hill at its southern
end and a step
drop close to the
northern threshold.
BELOW: An
Embraer EMB-110
Bandeirante
makes a dive for
the threshold of
Runway 02.

80-85_Tegucigalpa_TC.indd 83 11/05/2018 11:21

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