The basic requirements for landing under IFR are stipulated in
91.175. Note that the minimum
flight visibility published on the IAP must exist at the time in order to continue descent below DH (DA) or MDA and beyond or below this point and must remain so all the way to touchdown. A missed approach is required if the
flight visibility is determined to be less than the published minimum or if the required visual references are not in sight..
From FAR 1.1
Flight visibility means the average forward horizontal distance, from the cockpit of an aircraft in flight, at which prominent unlighted objects may be seen and identified by day and prominent lighted objects may be seen and identified by night.
These rules apply to all civil operations. In addition to these rules, operations conducted under 91 subpart K, 121, 125, 129 and 135 also require that additional conditions be met. These include that the officially reported wx be at or above published mins at the time the approach clearance is accepted and until on the final approach segment. Once inside the FAF, if a subsequent report indicates wx has fallen below the published minimums, the approach may be continued and a landing accomplished provided that the requirements of 91.175 are met.
135.225 explains this concept further. The operations or management (91K) specifications issued to the carrier are even more "specific" in this regard.
SPilot said:
Whatever is not explicitly forbidden by the FARs, is legal.
In my view, this statement is true only to a limited degree. The concept is opposite to the operations specifications concept where nothing is authorized unless an OpSpec is issued. Under part 91, it is true only until an incident, accident or other occurance attracts the attention of the FAA. Recommended practices such as those contained in the AIM and applicable ACs then become the standard against which the appropriateness of your actions are measured. Review of NTSB appeals to FAA sanctions againt airmen reveals a mixed bag of results. In effect, following an occurance, you can be held to a standard higher than that provided for under part 91 regulations. 91.13 is the typical regulation cited when an occurance has transpired. Other regulations may or may not be cited, but this one is often tacked on!
Strictly speaking from a legality point of view, part 91 does not specifically prohibit beginning the approach when wx conditions are less than those published in the applicable IAP, while operations requiring OpSpecs do. So it is allowable. This is one example of a situation where the above quoted statement is true. Keep in mind that there may be many circumstances where this a poor defense against an accusation of "careless or wreckless operation".
Collect on the bet and fly safely!
Best,