KeroseneSnorter said:
If you shallow up when weather is right at limits, you will not get in, or by the time you break out you will be off glidepath and eat up too much runway and no longer be able to land. In effect you will make your own missed approach senario when you should have been able to land. Also for the purpose of training and getting in on the real bad days you are permitted to go 100 feet below DH provided that you have the RAIL or other runway enviroment in site, however if at 100 feet you do not have the runway you go missed. Every 121 ride I ever took has this senario in it, 200 feet RAIL in site, at 100 feet runway becomes visible...then you land, if not visible, you go missed. Any deviation off of glideslope screws the approach up.
Not really a factor in light airplanes, but large stuff that is runway critical it is a big factor.
Also your procedure would get you a bust on any 121 ride. half scale deflection of glideslope (one dot at most carriers) is an automatic missed approach senario below 1000 feet. Your method would never get in since you would hit the missed approach criteria before you ever got to minimums.
Again it is a technique that works in light airplanes but is unacceptable in larger faster stuff.
Thanks, you save me alot of typing :beer:
I forgot my favorite loozer! My boss on the corp world!! He would fly with me
as a captain in a CE-550 on FAR 135 flights with pax. His approaches
bordered on dangerous, procedures were non-existant, on a LOC into NJ
he poped out fast, high and alligned with an occupied taxiway despite my
repeated calls: (Plus 20, 100 high....STILL... um....that's a taxiway you
might want to look to your left)
After the company went Tango Uni, the FAA gave me a call. Aparently, this
guy wasn't entirely qualified for FAR135 in a jet. Get this: He has NO TYPE
RATING, no instrument and no multi-engine licenses. I started drinking after
that. He got a $10,000 fine for each leg, and there were alot of leggs.
I hope he dies a horrible death.
CE