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28 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Name pavement marking colors |
White - runway and landing areas Yellow - taxiways, closed and hazardous areas, and holding positions |
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040, 006, 003, 126 |
4, 1, 36, 13 |
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Runway threshold markings What number of stripes are used in coordination with runway width? |
4 - 60ft 6 - 75ft 8 - 100ft 12 - 150ft 16 - 200ft |
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Identify the large white rectangles and how far they are located down the runway |
Runway aiming points, 1,000 ft |
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What is the name of the markings found 500ft increments |
Touchdown zone markings |
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Name the 3 types of runways |
Visual runway, nonprecision instrument, precision instrument |
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These markings are found along the entire length of the runway |
Runway edge markings |
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Are shoulder markings required? |
No, they are optional |
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What is identified as 4 white arrowheads and what is it used for |
Displaced threshold, used to reduce the length of runway available for landings |
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What color bar is used to identify a blast pad, stop-way, EMAS, or an aligned taxiway |
Yellow demarcation bar |
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What is the space used at the end of a runway, what color is it and what design is used? And the 3 types of areas used at the end of a runway |
Yellow, Chevron
Blast pad - reduced erosive effects of jet blast and propeller wash
Stop-way - an area beyond the takeoff runway able to support the aircraft during an aborted takeoff
EMAS - high energy absorbing materials of selected strength designed to crumble to stop an aircraft if needed |
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Yellow X's identify? |
Temporarily closed runways - markings stay
Permanently closed runways - paint is removed and lights turned off |
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List the 3 types of Taxiway markings |
Centerline marking - continuous yellow line
Airplane can move off movement area - Dashed edge markings followed by nonmovement area boundary markings
Airplane must call someone first - nonmovement area boundary markings followed by dashed edge markings |
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Identify runway holding position marking |
Four yellow lines, two solid and two dashed extending across the width of the taxiway or runway. |
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Identify a surface painted holding position sign |
They have a red background with white text and are an example of a mandatory instruction sign |
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Identify a runway location sign |
A yellow on black sign designed to tell you what runway you are located on. |
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Identify a runway distance remaining sign |
A white on black sign indicating how many feet (in thousands) of landing runway remain. |
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Identify a mandatory instruction sign |
A white on red sign used to identify entrance to a runway or critial area and areas where an aircraft are prohibited from entering. |
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Identify a taxiway location sign |
A yellow on black sign indicating what taxiway the aircraft is on |
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Identify taxiway direction sign |
A black on yellow sign identifying what direction the aircraft must turn to get to the desired taxiway |
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Identify the 3 helicopter landing areas |
White - civil heliport Red Cross - hospital heliport Yellow X - closed heliport |
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List the 4 airport beacons and what colors are used to identify them |
Lighted land airport - flashing white and green
Lighted water airport - flashing white and yellow
Lighted heliport - flashing white, green, yellow Lighted military - white, white, green |
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REIL stands for what and is used for what |
Runway End Identifier Lights, used to identify a runway in poor visibility conditions |
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Identify the different lights in the runway edge light system |
Green/red - identifies the ends of the runway, green identifies the landing threshold and red indicates the end of the runway White/yellow - identifies the runway edge, when approaching the runway the lights will be white up to the last 2,000 feet or half of the remaining runway length whichever is less |
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Identify in-runway lighting |
There are two types of in-runway lighting: Touchdown zone lighting (TDZL) consists of two rows of lights; one on each side and parallel to the runway centerline lights. They start at 100 feet from the landing threshold and extends to 3,000 feet from the threshold or midpoint of the runway, whichever is less. Runway centerline lighting system (RCLS) consists of lights spaced at 50-foot intervals. White until last 3,000 feet, then white alternating with red for the next 2,000 feet. All the red last 1,000 feet |
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Identify a VASI |
Visual Approach Slope Indicators (VASI) are lights visible from 3-5 miles away during the day and 20 miles away or more at night. The visual glide path of the VASI provides safe obstruction clearance: within plus or minus 10 degrees of the extended runway centerline and up to 4 Nautical Miles (NM) from the runway threshold |
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What is a ALS and how far can they be seen? |
Approach Light Systems (ALS) provide the basic means to transition from IFR to VFR for landing by radiating light beams in a directional pattern. ALS start at the landing threshold and extends into the approach area a distance of: 2,400-3,000ft for precision instrument runways 1,400-1,500ft for non-precision instrument runways |
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Identify taxiway lights |
Green - centerline lights Blue - edge lights Yellow - runway guard lights Red - stop bar lights Green/yellow - lead-on lights |