The Noida International Airport has began calibrating the ground-based radio navigation system at the greenfield facility this week with a maiden turboprop aircraft flight. The airport, positioned at Jewar, round 75 km from Delhi, is scheduled to begin industrial operations by the tip of 2024.
“A bright and sunny day at #NIAirport set the perfect stage for a DVOR calibration flight, the first of many. The Beechcraft King Air B300 took to the skies, to ensure all @aai_official navigation equipment works flawlessly. #FromTheGroundUp,” the airport posted on X on Thursday.
A calibration flight is an aviation operation performed to confirm and fine-tune the accuracy of navigation tools used at airports, in line with officers.
During a calibration flight, specialised aircraft geared up with exact measurement devices fly predefined patterns across the airport’s airspace.
These devices accumulate information on the efficiency of varied navigation aids, resembling instrument touchdown programs (ILS), very excessive frequency omnidirectional vary (VOR) stations, distance measuring tools (DME), and Doppler VHF omnirange (DVOR) stations.
DVOR, which stands for Doppler VHF omnirange, is a kind of ground-based radio navigation system utilized by aircraft for navigation.
It gives pilots with correct details about their place and route relative to the DVOR station.
DVOR stations emit VHF radio indicators that aircraft obtain and interpret to find out their bearing from the station.
The significance of calibration flights and DVOR for an airport lies in guaranteeing the protection and effectivity of air navigation operations.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi had in 2021 launched the Noida International Airport at Jewar in Uttar Pradesh. The airport, the second worldwide aerodrome in Delhi-NCR, has an preliminary capability to deal with 1.2 crore passengers every year.
(With PTI inputs)
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