With tower get authorization, in class G report
flyownnav said:
I'm looking for any legal documentation concerning a hypothetcial situation that arose during training in a sim the other day.
If you descend to straight in minimums on an approach with higher circling minimums and for some reason a circle is required are you authorized to climb to the circling minimums and execute the procedure?
If you are landing at a towered field, get authorization for the circle and landing for the intended runway from the tower. You must climb to the appropriate circling minimum as depicted on the approach plate prior to circling. You should decide on whether or not to circle prior to comencing the approach but there are other factors affecting your ability to continue the approach and land on the straight-in runway which may make you change your mind:
1)tailwind may have gone above 10 knots (the limit for a large number of aircraft)
2)crosswind component may have increased above a certain threshold and that value may be different for a wet, iced or dry runway making the other longer/wider runway preferable
3)the runway conditions are not acceptable: runway contamination, standing water, ice on the runway coupled with runway length, debris,etc...
4)there may be fog obscuring the approach end of the particular runway while the other runway is in the clear
At an uncontrolled field, just announcing your intentions is sufficient. Just make sure that you are circling on the side consistent with the traffic pattern applicable to the particular runway to be compliant with noise abatement, not intruding adjacent airpace, etc...It is also likely at an uncontrolled field that you may circle no matter what to observe the runway conditions and decide on the landing runway while you circle, even after coming straight-in. Many airports have the instrument approach procedure servicing the shortest runway and sometimes that is a factor in selecting a runway once the field in in sight.
In a two pilot cockpit, we brief what we are going to do if we land straight in and/or what if we decide to circle past the FAF if applicable. The reason for changing has to do with conditions that are dynamic or are not known until the field is in sight or you are talking to tower. The information you have for the airport is often provided by ATIS and could be up to an hour old. For instance, ATIS may state that aircraft are circling East to the opposite runway you are approaching but once on tower you may find out the tailwind component is only 5 knots and decide to land straight in or vice-versa. If you have not come up with a plan other than straight in then execute the missed approach and come back.
For training in a sim, circling maneuvers are only "approved" at certain airports and only for certain runways on certain types of sims. The only two that I've seen is at Memphis(one of the South runways) and Kennedy for only 1 runway (one of the Noth-west pointing runways) at each airport. So, I would guess at whatever sim you were, if not able to land straight-in you would execute the missed approach.
Most Part 121 operators require weather to be 1000-3 to circle and then use 1000 HAA or MDA whichever is higher. So, for a 767 type ride you may circle at the charts MDA but for a line check you would circle probably at a higher minimum.