Flight simulations
As part of the design process for the
SOAP approach, a set of simulation trials
were carried out in order to determine the
optimum values of certain parameters in
the procedure description and evaluate
its overall flyability. These trials were
carried out in the Eurocopter SPHERE
facility, in Marignane, France. The pilots
involved included representatives from
various different offshore operators.
The SOAP procedure was flown in the
simulator using different values for
the Minimum Decision Range (MDR),
descent slope, maximum offset angle
between the final approach track and
the track from MAP to rig, and final
horizontal and vertical airspeeds. These
were tested against different wind
directions and speeds, and a visual
range slightly above the MDR value.
The primary results from the simulation
trials were that the final visual approach
and deceleration towards the rig is
the most critical of the procedure,
and must be at least 0.75NM for
a final groundspeed of 80kts, but
could be reduced to 0.5NM for a
groundspeed of 60kts. It was agreed
that a glideslope of 6° was too steep
at a groundspeed of 80kts, and that at
this speed 4° should be the maximum.
A maximum offset angle of 30°
was agreed, with 45° making it
hard to establish visual contact in
the difficult visual conditions.
Also tested was the presentation of the
vertical guidance provided to the pilot.
Some pilots preferred the ‘Procedural
guidance’ [Figure 3] in which an ILSlike
glideslope beam was provided
during the descent but not during the
level segment, whereas others preferred
the ‘Full ILS-like guidance’ [Figure
4] in which a linear vertical deviation
scale was provided on the level segment
in addition to the ILS-glideslope.
Overall the trials were deemed to be
successful and of sufficient quality that
the results were used to finalise the
approach procedure as described above.
Flight trials
The Geostationary satellites broadcasting
the SBAS correction message appear at
a low elevation angle at the Northerly
latitudes of many of the oil platforms

Figure 2

Figure 3

Figure 4

Figure 5
where the helicopters will be operating.
When coupled with the potential
occurrence of signal masking by the
airframe of the helicopter itself, and
sub-optimal antenna location, visibility
constraints could be significant barriers
for EGNOS usage. To assess the practical
impact of these parameters the GIANT
project undertook a helicopter flight trial
to investigate the signal availability of
EGNOS under representative conditions.
The trial platform was a Eurocopter
AS.332L Super Puma operated by CHC
Scotia helicopters out of Aberdeen [Figure
5] and is a typical aircraft that works in
the North Sea environment. The trial took
place near Aberdeen airport in Northern
Scotland. At this latitude the three
EGNOS geostationary satellites are at a
very low elevation angle to the South.
The helicopter had a typical GNSS
antenna installation that is currently
used as an input to a Canadian Marconi
CMA3012 GPS receiver that in turn
provides position input to the aircraft
Flight Management System (FMS).
For the purposes of the trial the aircraft’s
own antenna was used. The location
[Figure 6] is on the tail boom, just above
the rear of the passenger cabin. There was
expected to be clear airframe masking
from the main cabin and engine assembly
ahead, as well as possibly from the tail
itself to the rear. This was expected to
fully obscure reception of SBAS Geo
signals in a 70° arc ahead of the antenna.
The objectives of the trial were to examine
the extent to which airframe masking
impacts SBAS satellite reception as well as
the practical implications
of real world antenna
installations on EGNOS
performance. To this end a
Septentrio PolaRx2 SBAS
capable data logging
receiver was installed
on board the helicopter
connected to the main
antenna. This was
configured to receive all
SBAS satellites in view.
Data was also logged
through the helicopter’s
own flight data recording system so that
aircraft attitude parameters were available.
During the trial the aircraft undertook a
series of orbits at constant bank angles
and altitude. The objective being to record
data on the practical masking effect on the
visible SBAS geostationary satellites. It
was found that engine masking caused the
receiver to sequentially lose lock on the
three satellites during periods where the
helicopter’s heading moved through due
South. Whilst the period of total SBASsignal
loss was only about 20 seconds in
each case, the individual satellites were
each obscured for up to 100
seconds. In the operational
EGNOS space segment
of only two satellites this
could present a risk.
The horizontal and vertical
protection levels calculated
by the receiver were well
within the requirements for
APV approach procedures
whilst SBAS satellites
were in view. However
there were notable spikes
in the protection levels
during periods where
no SBAS satellites were
being tracked. These spikes would
have exceeded alarm limits for APVII,
LPV200 and APV-I approaches.
Finally a number of representative
SOAP-like approaches were undertaken
to the four compass headings to allow
the collection of data on the practical
performance of EGNOS under
representative flight dynamics. The
constant heading meant that there were
no periods in which SBAS-tracking
was completely lost, and as such the
protection limits were always within
APV-II alert limits. As expected flying
the approach in a southerly direction
caused significant constraints to the
visibility of the GEOs, whilst the northfacing
approach saw all three satellites
being consistently tracked. Surprisingly, it
was found that when flying the approach
East or West only the AOR-E satellite
was consistently in view. It is possible
that this was due to the low antenna
gain characteristics at low elevation
angles resulting in successful tracking
of the highest elevation satellite only.
The flight trials clearly show that in certain
situations the orientation of the helicopter
can cause the receiver to lose track of all
SBAS satellites, denying it the guidance
required to perform APV approaches.
Whilst the current antenna position is
well suited to providing an input for
the GPS navigator, to support SOAP
operations it would ideally be relocated
or else augmented with a second antenna
to reduce the effect of airframe masking.

Figure 6
Conclusions
The GIANT project has been pushing
ahead with the necessary activities to
make EGNOS a viable navigation system
in the hazardous North Sea environment.
Procedure development, flight simulations
and flight trials have all contributed to
the development of SOAP helicopter
approaches and will feed into a potential
future implementation process.
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