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Correcting said:Here's the answer to the original question.
If you are going into ASE on the IFR approach, and you are Cat D, then you can fly all the way to the final approach fix (Allix or Doype). At that point, if you see the airport, you can land. If you don't see the airport, you go miss. You can't legally go beyond the FAF without the airport in sight. Why? Because there are no minimums for you.
There's your answer.
Correcting said:Here's the answer to the original question.
If you are going into ASE on the IFR approach, and you are Cat D, then you can fly all the way to the final approach fix (Allix or Doype). At that point, if you see the airport, you can land. If you don't see the airport, you go miss. You can't legally go beyond the FAF without the airport in sight. Why? Because there are no minimums for you.
There's your answer.
AIRCRAFT APPROACH CATEGORY- A grouping of aircraft based on a speed of 1.3 times the stall speed in the landing configuration at maximum gross landing weight. An aircraft must fit in only one category. If it is necessary to maneuver at speeds in excess of the upper limit of a speed range for a category, the minimums for the category for that speed must be used. For example, an aircraft which falls in Category A, but is circling to land at a speed in excess of 91 knots, must use the approach Category B minimums when circling to land. The categories are as follows:
a. Category A- Speed less than 91 knots.
b. Category B- Speed 91 knots or more but less than 121 knots.
c. Category C- Speed 121 knots or more but less than 141 knots.
d. Category D- Speed 141 knots or more but less than 166 knots.
e. Category E- Speed 166 knots or more.
Buddro said:My buddy got asked a varitey of questions on the following below I was curious what would be correct.
Here is a link to the approach plates in KASE:
http://www.airnav.com/depart?http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0603/05889VDGC.PDF
http://www.airnav.com/depart?http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0603/05889LDE.PDF
OK here is the scenario: You are flying into KASE on the LOC or VOR approaches. We are a category D aircraft. The approach minimums for both approaches are clearly depicted as N/A for a Category D aircraft. Can you even shoot these approaches in IFR conditions? What about VFR? If so what would the approach minimums be? These are the only 2 approaches in KASE that are IFR approaches. I know alot of corporate airplanes that are cat D aircraft fly into KASE, how do they legally get in during IFR conditions? I know it is not a VFR only airport. If you can get in VFR do you start the approach IFR even though it is illegal because CAT D is NA?
I need some help.
Thanks.
CL60 said:Example: In a G450, (normally a CAT D bird), for example there is a Gulfstream ASC, (Additional Source of Cash), that allows you to dispatch as a CAT C aircraft. Just flip the placard over before you go.
There are several factors to consider; Make sure the release paperwork reflects CAT C. You must ensure a landing weight of less than 51,000 pounds, (going off of memory here), and double-check to ensure your approach climb numbers among others.
Boca Raton has the same problem as it relates to category.
satpak77 said:just curious how this is possible, especially the point about "ensure a landing weight of less than XXX" since App Cat is based on Max Gross Weigth VREF