{"id":18004,"date":"2026-01-02T14:59:34","date_gmt":"2026-01-02T12:59:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/?p=18004"},"modified":"2026-01-16T18:12:21","modified_gmt":"2026-01-16T16:12:21","slug":"700ft-heli-cross","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/700ft-heli-cross\/","title":{"rendered":"Evaluating 700&#8242; restrictions for helicopters crossing south of LGAV"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1 data-start=\"100\" data-end=\"150\">Context: Heliports and the 700&#8242; limit<\/h1>\n<p data-start=\"152\" data-end=\"1215\">The Hellenic Civil Aviation Authority (HCAA) publishes procedures in its Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) for helicopters operating from private heliports south of <strong data-start=\"326\" data-end=\"351\">Eleftherios Venizelos<\/strong> (LGAV). A safety study prepared for the Athens air\u2011traffic service describes the procedures. Helicopter pilots departing or arriving at heliports such as <strong data-start=\"508\" data-end=\"527\">Koropi <\/strong>must cross the ILS localizer beams for runways 03L\/03R <strong data-start=\"608\" data-end=\"661\">\u201cas soon as possible at an altitude up to 700\u00a0ft\u201d<\/strong> <strong>(HCAA AIP &#8211; 3.19.21.1.5 and 3.70.21.1.6)<\/strong> to avoid traffic collision avoidance (TCAS) alerts and interference with IFR traffic <span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/hcaa.gov.gr\/sites\/default\/files\/documents\/lgav_safety_research_study_fv.pdf#:~:text=%CE%BA%CF%85%CE%BA%CE%BB%CE%BF%CF%86%CE%BF%CF%81%CE%AF%CE%B1%CF%82%20%CE%BA%CE%B1%CE%B9%20%CF%83%CF%84%CE%B7%20%CF%83%CF%85%CE%BD%CE%AD%CF%87%CE%B5%CE%B9%CE%B1%20%CE%BC%CE%B5,%CF%83%CE%B5%20%CE%B1%CF%80%CF%8C%CF%83%CF%84%CE%B1%CF%83%CE%B7%20%20%CF%80%CE%B5%CF%81%CE%AF%CF%80%CE%BF%CF%85%202%CE%9D%CE%9C\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">hcaa.gov.gr<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>. The same study states that inbound helicopters are instructed by ATH TMA Info to contact <strong data-start=\"875\" data-end=\"894\">Venizelos Tower<\/strong> and that the pilots <strong data-start=\"915\" data-end=\"1022\">\u201cshall cross without delay the ILS of the runways, not above 700\u00a0ft, leaving the area free immediately\u201d<\/strong>and must strictly follow ATC instructions. IFR traffic has priority and continuous two\u2011way communication is require.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"1217\" data-end=\"1642\">The HCAA\u2019s rule therefore sets a <strong data-start=\"1250\" data-end=\"1277\">700\u2011ft maximum altitude<\/strong> (mean sea level, MSL) for crossing the runway ILS beams. <strong>The HCAA (\u0391\u03a0\u0391) are summoning pilots to testify as they crossed the ILS 3 NM south of the Runway at around 780 ft,<\/strong> roughly 80\u00a0ft above this published limit. To judge whether such cases constitute a violation, one must consider the tolerances allowed by <strong data-start=\"1571\" data-end=\"1590\">instrumentation<\/strong> (altimeter errors) and by <strong data-start=\"1617\" data-end=\"1641\">operations standards<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<h2>Altimeter accuracy according to ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/h2>\n<p>ICAO Procedures for Air Navigation Services \u2013 Aircraft Operating Procedures (PANS\u2011OPS) are contained in Doc 8168. Volume III, Section 2, Chapter 3 defines the acceptable tolerance for a serviceable altimeter. For altimeters with a test range up to 9 000 m, the permitted error is \u00b120 m (\u00b160 ft) (Doc 8168, Vol III, Section 2, Chapter 3, Table 2\u20113\u20111). For altimeters with a test range up to 15 000 m, the permitted error is \u00b125 m (\u00b180 ft) (Doc 8168, Vol III, Section 2, Chapter 3, Table 2\u20113\u20112). ICAO further states that if the indication is within tolerance, no adjustment shall be made at any stage of flight and any error within tolerance on the ground should be ignored during flight (Doc 8168, Vol III, Section 2, Chapter 3, Note 1, Note 2 and Note 3 to Tables 2\u20113\u20111 and 2\u20113\u20112).<\/p>\n<h2>Operational altitude crossings<\/h2>\n<p>PANS\u2011OPS also recognises that altitude crossings are not instantaneous and require defined tolerances in operational procedures. Operators are required to specify crossing altitude deviation tolerances in their SOPs, acknowledging aircraft performance limits and human reaction time (Doc 8168, Vol III, Section 5, Chapter 3, para 3.2(d)).<\/p>\n<h2 data-start=\"1644\" data-end=\"1703\">Altimeter accuracy according to ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc\u00a08168)<\/h2>\n<p data-start=\"1705\" data-end=\"2130\">The <strong data-start=\"1709\" data-end=\"1761\">International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)<\/strong> publishes Procedures for Air Navigation Services (PANS\u2011OPS) in <strong data-start=\"1825\" data-end=\"1837\">Doc\u00a08168<\/strong>. Volume\u00a0III covers aircraft operating procedures and includes mandatory pre\u2011flight altimeter checks. The document requires pilots to set the QNH or QFE and tap the instrument to remove mechanical friction. It then specifies the <strong data-start=\"2069\" data-end=\"2101\">acceptable error (tolerance)<\/strong> for a serviceable altimeter:<\/p>\n<ul data-start=\"2132\" data-end=\"2811\">\n<li data-start=\"2132\" data-end=\"2339\">\n<p data-start=\"2134\" data-end=\"2339\">When an altimeter is tested on the ground with a range up to <strong data-start=\"2195\" data-end=\"2219\">9\u00a0000\u00a0m (\u224830\u00a0000\u00a0ft)<\/strong>, the indicated elevation <strong data-start=\"2245\" data-end=\"2278\">must be within \u00b120\u00a0m (\u00b160\u00a0ft)<\/strong> of the actual height <span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" title=\"ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=A%20serviceable%20altimeter%20indicates%20the,point%2C%20within%20a%20tolerance%20of\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"2340\" data-end=\"2487\">\n<p data-start=\"2342\" data-end=\"2487\">For altimeters with a test range up to <strong data-start=\"2381\" data-end=\"2406\">15\u00a0000\u00a0m (\u224850\u00a0000\u00a0ft)<\/strong>, the allowed error is <strong data-start=\"2429\" data-end=\"2447\">\u00b125\u00a0m (\u00b180\u00a0ft) <\/strong><span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=a,and\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"2488\" data-end=\"2811\">\n<p data-start=\"2490\" data-end=\"2811\">ICAO notes that these tolerances are considered acceptable for aerodromes up to <strong data-start=\"2570\" data-end=\"2582\">3\u00a0500\u00a0ft<\/strong> elevation, and that if the altimeter reading is within tolerance, <strong data-start=\"2649\" data-end=\"2681\">no adjustment should be made<\/strong>. Any error within tolerance on the ground should be <strong data-start=\"2735\" data-end=\"2773\">ignored by the pilot during flight <\/strong><span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=Note%201,by%20the%20pilot%20during%20flight\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p data-start=\"2813\" data-end=\"3143\">The PANS\u2011OPS requirement means that even a <strong data-start=\"2856\" data-end=\"3007\">properly functioning altimeter can legally display a height up to 60\u00a0ft (or 80\u00a0ft for the wider\u2011range instruments) above or below the true altitude<\/strong>. ICAO\u2019s guidance explicitly tells pilots not to correct for these inherent errors during flight. <span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=Note%201,by%20the%20pilot%20during%20flight\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>.<\/p>\n<h2 data-start=\"4089\" data-end=\"4120\">Other operational tolerances<\/h2>\n<ol data-start=\"4122\" data-end=\"5558\">\n<li data-start=\"4122\" data-end=\"4703\">\n<p data-start=\"4125\" data-end=\"4703\"><strong data-start=\"4125\" data-end=\"4151\">Flight\u2011test tolerances<\/strong> &#8211; The Hellenic CAA\u2019s Flight Examiner Manual (which mirrors EASA standards) lists the acceptable deviations during skill tests. For example, during normal flight in a commercial pilot skill test, <strong data-start=\"4348\" data-end=\"4394\">altitude must be maintained within \u00b1150\u00a0ft<\/strong>; for instrument rating tests the tolerance is <strong data-start=\"4441\" data-end=\"4452\">\u00b1100\u00a0ft<\/strong>, and even during simulated emergencies the deviation may be <strong data-start=\"4513\" data-end=\"4524\">\u00b1200\u00a0ft<\/strong>. These tolerances reflect realistic limits for holding altitude, especially in turbulence or when flying manually. A deviation of 80\u00a0ft is well within these flight\u2011test limits.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"4705\" data-end=\"5187\">\n<p data-start=\"4708\" data-end=\"5187\"><strong data-start=\"4708\" data-end=\"4746\">Instrument system error allowances<\/strong> &#8211; In reduced\u2011vertical\u2011separation\u2011minimum (RVSM) airspace, EASA rules accept a maximum <strong data-start=\"4833\" data-end=\"4889\">assigned altitude deviation (AAD) of \u00b190\u00a0m (\u00b1300\u00a0ft)<\/strong> and specify that the altitude\u2011keeping performance should have an <strong data-start=\"4955\" data-end=\"4981\">altimetry system error<\/strong> of less than <strong data-start=\"4995\" data-end=\"5014\">\u00b160\u00a0m (\u00b1200\u00a0ft)<\/strong> (SPA.RVSM.115). Although helicopters operating near LGAV are not in RVSM airspace, these figures illustrate that ATC systems allow significant buffer for instrument error.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"5189\" data-end=\"5558\">\n<p data-start=\"5192\" data-end=\"5558\"><strong data-start=\"5192\" data-end=\"5215\">Operator procedures<\/strong> &#8211; PANS\u2011OPS Volume III instructs operators to include <strong data-start=\"5269\" data-end=\"5311\">crossing altitude deviation tolerances<\/strong> in their standard operating procedures for stabilized approaches <span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=%28Section%206%2C%20Chapter%201%29,regarding%20at%20least%20the%20following\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>. The document does not prescribe a specific figure but recognises that slight deviations are expected and should be accounted for in manuals.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h2 data-start=\"5560\" data-end=\"5627\">Analysis: Are 80\u2011ft deviations a violation of the 700\u2011ft limit?<\/h2>\n<ol data-start=\"5629\" data-end=\"8525\">\n<li data-start=\"5629\" data-end=\"6071\">\n<p data-start=\"5632\" data-end=\"6071\"><strong data-start=\"5632\" data-end=\"5661\">Nature of the 700\u2011ft rule<\/strong> &#8211; The HCAA AIP requires helicopter pilots to <em data-start=\"5707\" data-end=\"5747\">cross the ILS \u201cnot above 700 ft\u201d <strong>(HCAA AIP &#8211; 3.19.21.1.5 and 3.70.21.1.6). <\/strong><\/em>This directive is primarily a <strong data-start=\"5858\" data-end=\"5888\">traffic\u2011management measure<\/strong> to keep helicopters below the glide paths of IFR arrivals and to prevent TCAS alerts. It is not a published minimum safe altitude; it is a restriction intended to segregate traffic.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"6073\" data-end=\"6710\">\n<p data-start=\"6076\" data-end=\"6710\"><strong data-start=\"6076\" data-end=\"6096\">Instrument error<\/strong> &#8211; ICAO and EASA acknowledge that a serviceable altimeter can indicate a height <strong data-start=\"6176\" data-end=\"6227\">up to 60\u201380\u00a0ft different from the true altitude <\/strong><span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=A%20serviceable%20altimeter%20indicates%20the,point%2C%20within%20a%20tolerance%20of\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168).<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>\u00a0Therefore, a helicopter pilot whose altimeter displays 700\u00a0ft could in reality be flying at 760\u00a0ft and still be within the instrument\u2019s certification tolerance. Conversely, a pilot intentionally flying at 680\u00a0ft indicated might actually be crossing the ILS at 620\u00a0ft. <strong data-start=\"6617\" data-end=\"6710\">Authorities evaluating altitude deviations must account for this measurement uncertainty.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"6712\" data-end=\"7155\">\n<p data-start=\"6715\" data-end=\"7155\"><strong data-start=\"6715\" data-end=\"6751\">Pilot workload and human factors<\/strong> &#8211; Hovering helicopters in congested airspace must transition from climb or descent to level flight and cross a beam quickly, all while communicating with ATC, monitoring traffic and maintaining situational awareness. Even trained pilots may overshoot the target altitude by tens of feet before stabilising. The Flight Examiner Manual tolerances (\u00b1100-150 ft in normal flight) reflect these challenges.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"7157\" data-end=\"7867\">\n<p data-start=\"7160\" data-end=\"7867\"><strong data-start=\"7160\" data-end=\"7180\">Operational risk<\/strong> &#8211; From an air\u2011traffic\u2011control perspective, the critical factor is <strong data-start=\"7247\" data-end=\"7270\">vertical separation<\/strong> between the helicopter and the glide slope of incoming IFR aircraft. An 80\u2011ft overshoot means the helicopter was still <strong data-start=\"7391\" data-end=\"7414\">well below 1\u00a0000\u00a0ft<\/strong> AGL, and IFR arrivals on a 3\u00b0 glide path would be about <strong data-start=\"7471\" data-end=\"7488\">600\u00a0ft higher<\/strong> than the helicopter when crossing the same lateral point. The safety study\u2019s objective is to prevent TCAS alerts; minor deviations within altimeter tolerance are unlikely to create a hazard. <strong>The study itself recognises that the measure is to avoid \u201cunacceptable ATC workload and delays\u201d rather than a hard obstacle\u2011clearance requirement.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"7869\" data-end=\"8525\">\n<p data-start=\"7872\" data-end=\"8525\"><strong data-start=\"7872\" data-end=\"7899\">Compliance and judgment<\/strong> &#8211; Pilots should aim to respect the published 700\u2011ft limit and anticipate instrument errors by flying slightly below the restriction when operationally feasible. However, <strong data-start=\"8071\" data-end=\"8225\">regulatory enforcement should differentiate between intentional disregard and minor overshoots attributable to instrument error or human reaction time<\/strong>. Both ICAO and EASA explicitly instruct pilots not to correct for small altimeter errors <span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bazl.admin.ch\/dam\/de\/sd-web\/BClH60nukzUI\/icao_doc_8168_aircraft_operations_volume_iii.pdf#:~:text=Note%201,by%20the%20pilot%20during%20flight\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">ICAO PANS\u2011OPS (Doc 8168)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a> &#8211;\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"\" data-state=\"closed\"><span class=\"ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]\" data-testid=\"webpage-citation-pill\"><a class=\"flex h-4.5 overflow-hidden rounded-xl px-2 text-[9px] font-medium transition-colors duration-150 ease-in-out text-token-text-secondary! bg-[#F4F4F4]! dark:bg-[#303030]!\" href=\"https:\/\/www.easa.europa.eu\/sites\/default\/files\/dfu\/amc_gm_to_part-nco_-_issue_2_amendment_13.pdf#:~:text=AMC1%20NCO,by%20the%20pilot%20during%20flight\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span class=\"relative start-0 bottom-0 flex h-full w-full items-center\"><span class=\"flex h-4 w-full items-center justify-between overflow-hidden\"><span class=\"max-w-[15ch] grow truncate overflow-hidden text-center\">(Annex VII to ED Decision 2022\/012\/R)<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/a><\/span><\/span>. Punishing pilots for deviations of 60-80 ft, which fall within the allowable error, <strong data-start=\"8480\" data-end=\"8524\">would contradict international standards<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h2>Theory of verification and ATC authority<\/h2>\n<p>From a regulatory and technical standpoint, an alleged altitude violation in controlled airspace can only be meaningfully assessed if the <strong>method of verification<\/strong> is clearly defined and legally sound. ICAO does not recognise visual estimation, subjective observation, or post\u2011event inference as reliable means of altitude determination. In practice, altitude compliance may be inferred only from <strong>surveillance-derived data<\/strong> (Mode C or Mode S pressure altitude), <strong>pilot statements<\/strong>, or <strong>recorded ATC clearances<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mode C\/S altitude reports are based on pressure altitude referenced to 1013.25 hPa, not QNH<\/strong>. Any subsequent conversion to QNH introduces additional uncertainty due to pressure differences, rounding, encoder resolution (typically 25 ft), and altimetry system error already accepted by ICAO PANS\u2011OPS. As a result, surveillance data alone cannot determine whether a helicopter exceeded a published QNH-based altitude limit by a margin smaller than the certified tolerance of the altimetry system.<\/p>\n<p>Equally critical is the role of <strong>air traffic control authority<\/strong>. Under ICAO Annex 11 and standard ATS practice, a pilot operating in controlled airspace is required to comply with <strong>ATC clearances and instructions<\/strong>. If an ATC unit explicitly assigns, approves, <strong>or tacitly accepts an altitude <\/strong>either by instruction (e.g. \u201cmaintain 700 feet\u201d) or by continued radar control <strong>without corrective action, the pilot is operating under ATC authority.<\/strong> In such cases, responsibility for vertical separation and traffic management is shared, and <strong>enforcement actions cannot be assessed in isolation from the controller\u2019s instructions, approvals, or lack of intervention.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, <strong>if a controller observes an aircraft momentarily deviating from a target altitude and does not issue an immediate correction, this is operationally interpreted as acceptance of the deviation within tolerable limits<\/strong>, particularly when no loss of separation, TCAS alert, or procedural breakdown occurs. ICAO operational doctrine does not support retrospective enforcement for transient deviations that were observed in real time and managed &#8211; or deemed unnecessary to manage by ATC.<\/p>\n<p>Therefore, any allegation of a violation of the 700\u2011ft ILS crossing restriction must answer two foundational questions before it can be considered valid: <strong>by what technically reliable means was the altitude measured<\/strong>, and <strong>what altitude clearance or acceptance was in force from ATC at the time<\/strong>. Without clear, correlated evidence addressing both points, the determination of a violation is neither operationally robust nor aligned with ICAO principles of surveillance accuracy, controller authority, and shared responsibility in controlled airspace.<\/p>\n<h2 data-start=\"8527\" data-end=\"8540\">Conclusion<\/h2>\n<p>When the 700\u2011ft ILS crossing restriction is examined through the lens of ICAO PANS\u2011OPS and EASA operational philosophy, it becomes clear that <strong>enforcement cannot rely on a zero\u2011tolerance interpretation.<\/strong> ICAO explicitly accepts certified altimeter errors of up to \u00b160\u201380 ft, instructs pilots to ignore such errors in flight, and requires operators to define crossing altitude deviation tolerances in their procedures. Against this framework, <strong>an alleged exceedance of approximately 80 ft cannot be assessed in isolation from instrument tolerance, surveillance uncertainty, aircraft handling dynamics, and ATC involvement.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Crucially, the burden of proof rests with the authority to demonstrate not only the measured altitude with technical reliability, but also that the pilot was operating outside any ATC clearance or acceptance in force at the time. Where a controller had radar contact, issued or maintained an altitude instruction, and did not intervene,<strong> the pilot was operating under ATC authority and within the shared responsibility model established by ICAO<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Absent clear, correlated evidence of a deliberate or significant deviation that created a safety risk, treating minor, momentary altitude differences as violations is inconsistent with ICAO doctrine and with the intent of the published 700\u2011ft procedure.<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Context: Heliports and the 700&#8242; limit The Hellenic Civil Aviation Authority (HCAA) publishes procedures in its Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) for helicopters operating from private heliports south of Eleftherios Venizelos (LGAV). A safety study prepared for the Athens air\u2011traffic service describes the procedures. Helicopter pilots departing or arriving at heliports such as Koropi must cross&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":25,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[59,208,209,113,219,15,196],"class_list":["post-18004","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","tag-easa","tag-helicopters","tag-heliports","tag-icao","tag-lgav","tag-vfr","tag-196"],"acf":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18004","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/25"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=18004"}],"version-history":[{"count":21,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18004\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":18028,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18004\/revisions\/18028"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=18004"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=18004"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/greekhelicopters.gr\/helos\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=18004"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}