Swerpipe
My Favorite Customer
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2002
- Posts
- 274
And a few other things
1)Some charted visual procedures will spell out how to navigate and minumum altitudes. Those are at pilot discretion but can not descend below minimums and need to navigate according to the chart. e.g. Tip Toe Visual at KSFO
2) Weather needs to be 1000-3 at the airport and have the airport or preceding aircraft in sight to get it
3) On Part 135 you can not be more than 35nm from the airport even if you have it in sight. The controller might still clear you but you have to decline until <35nm
4)On part 135, we can not do visual approaches to un controlled field or fields after the tower is closed. You either land out of the instrument approach and cancel or cancel in the air within 10 nm.
5) Warning. Beware at night. I like to look at the the ILS approach and fly the minumum altitudes on the profile at night. At unfamiliar fields we ALWAYS fly the approach even if the controller issued "a Visual" and if not properly aligned we circle to land. If you fly to enough unfamiliar fields at nights with volcanos around you'll see why. Plenty of examples in the Southwest and Mexico. Probably the best habit I could recommend you.
1)Some charted visual procedures will spell out how to navigate and minumum altitudes. Those are at pilot discretion but can not descend below minimums and need to navigate according to the chart. e.g. Tip Toe Visual at KSFO
2) Weather needs to be 1000-3 at the airport and have the airport or preceding aircraft in sight to get it
3) On Part 135 you can not be more than 35nm from the airport even if you have it in sight. The controller might still clear you but you have to decline until <35nm
4)On part 135, we can not do visual approaches to un controlled field or fields after the tower is closed. You either land out of the instrument approach and cancel or cancel in the air within 10 nm.
5) Warning. Beware at night. I like to look at the the ILS approach and fly the minumum altitudes on the profile at night. At unfamiliar fields we ALWAYS fly the approach even if the controller issued "a Visual" and if not properly aligned we circle to land. If you fly to enough unfamiliar fields at nights with volcanos around you'll see why. Plenty of examples in the Southwest and Mexico. Probably the best habit I could recommend you.