Definition
The set of practical problems that arise because instrument approach procedures, charts, and supporting navigation data are reviewed, amended, and republished on a fixed schedule (typically every 28 or 56 days), meaning that changes in the real world — new obstacles, altered airspace, modified procedures, updated minimums — may not appear on charts or in avionics databases until the next scheduled revision is released and loaded.
Plain English
Charts and database updates only come out on a regular schedule. Anything that changes in between has to be communicated some other way, and pilots have to make sure they are flying the current version once the new cycle takes effect.
Context Anchor
Seen during instrument flight planning, chart review, and checks of onboard navigation database currency before using an instrument procedure.
Derivation
Revision means a re-viewing or reworking of something. Cycle comes from the Greek kyklos, meaning circle or wheel — something that repeats on a regular schedule. Together the phrase points to the predictable, repeating turn of the publication wheel that brings out updated charts and data.
Why Pilots Care
Failure to account for revision timing can result in use of superseded procedures, increasing risk of navigation errors or regulatory violations.
Intuition Check
Do not assume a chart or database is current just because it is available. For this term, the key point is whether the procedure information is effective for the date of use.
Example Sentence 1
During the briefing, the instructor pointed out several issues related to the revision cycle, including a new tower near the final approach course that would not appear on charts until the next update.
Example Sentence 2
Understanding issues related to revision cycle helps ensure the latest enroute charts are loaded before departure.