Dumb Pilot
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2006
- Posts
- 1,570
The circle-to-land restriction only marks you as a pilot for an operation that was saving a buck by issuing restricted types.
Bingo
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The circle-to-land restriction only marks you as a pilot for an operation that was saving a buck by issuing restricted types.
Not sure what you are implying
if you cannot maintain visual conditions while circling, i.e., lose sight of the runway, you should execute a missed approach. At no time during the circling maneuver should you be IMC.
I was questioning your statement that a circling approach was not an IFR procedure.
Maybe, even in category D you will generally have minimums that are less then VFR. ILS 9R at ORD gives you 2 miles, you need 3 miles to be VFR.
if it turns into an IMC issue you must excecute the appropraite MAP. Let me see if I can find a reference for my statement and thus see if we can agree on the final issue.
AIM 5-4-21. Missed Approach said:(C)If visual reference is lost while circling‐to‐land from an instrument approach, the missed approach specified for that particular procedure must be followed (unless an alternate missed approach procedure is specified by ATC). To become established on the prescribed missed approach course, the pilot should make an initial climbing turn toward the landing runway and continue the turn until established on the missed approach course. Inasmuch as the circling maneuver may be accomplished in more than one direction, different patterns will be required to become established on the prescribed missed approach course, depending on the aircraft position at the time visual reference is lost. Adherence to the procedure will help assure that an aircraft will remain laterally within the circling and missed approach obstruction clearance areas. Refer to paragraph h concerning vertical obstruction clearance when starting a missed approach at other than the MAP
I don't disagree with the lose site of the runway execute the missed approach portion of your statement. It definitely isn't a VFR procedure though and it can be done in IMC.
Well you have me confused now. How can it be a visual procedure if you lose sight of the runway while circling.
Where did anyone say anything about amateurs?
Uhhh... no. We didn't get our first 737 until 1999.No it means they probably got their certificate before 1998.
Who gives a crap if it is on there?!?! Most of my Types have the limitation, but a couple don't - so what. When will you ever do a circling approach in an airliner? Why would you want to waste your money getting that "limitation" removed.
You need 3 miles to be VFR, you have 2 miles then ergo you are IFR. You are confusing visual references for conditions of flight. A contact approach is an IFR procedure with visual references as well, that doesn't make it a VFR procedure (at least not in the US).[/quot
Sorry, I had to take one more peak before I left. Let me restate my position I should hve been more carefull in my first post. The circle to land maneuver is not allowed in IMC conditions period. It is a structured visual maneuver. You cannot leave the MDA unless you have the runway of intended landing in sight and are able to continue the landing within the stabilized approach criteria, which by the way is where most checkride busts occur. One mile, two miles or greater does not make any difference as your still doing a visual maneuver. Now if for some reason you don't believe that and think you can slip in and out of IMC or non-visual conditions set for your specific category aircraft, well then I suspect we will be reading about someday. Remember the TERPS only guarantee 300" terrain clearance on these approaches.
Tomorrow!
The collection of pilots with the Vmc restriction is most likely almost 100% professional pilots where the company paid for their type rating. If I were to sample from the Vmc only set I would find almost every sample from that set was a professional pilot at the time they got their type rating. This does not infer that only professional pilots are limited to the Vmc only set. If I had a set of all type rated pilots, a sample from that set would not have the same probability as the Vmc only set of picking a professional pilot where the airline paid for the type rating. You are reading too much into this. As far as the 1998 date, it was late 1998 that our POI made the restriction. He could be your POI made he change later. This is really an exciting topicYou said the circle-to-land restriction marked a pilot as a professional; the corollary would be that someone without that restriction is an amateur -- "someone with enough money who can buy a rating," in your words.
I'm telling you there are plenty of people, myself included, who "earned" unrestricted type ratings at air carriers.
Uhhh... no. We didn't get our first 737 until 1999.
Now if for some reason you don't believe that and think you can slip in and out of IMC or non-visual conditions set for your specific category aircraft, well then I suspect we will be reading about someday.
You cannot leave the MDA unless you have the runway of intended landing in sight and are able to continue the landing within the stabilized approach criteria
Once the circle commences, you must have the runway in sight the entire time on the approach or it is mandatory MAP.I never said that read QXDASH8's post he summarizes it correctly. A circling approach is an IFR approach is all that I stated.
You can leave the MDA without having the runway in sight see 91.175.
Once the circle commences, you must have the runway in sight the entire time on the approach or it is mandatory MAP.