Enigma,
Thanks, OK I understand about the side-step thing, and I try not to do that. I always ask if it becomes an option inside 20 miles. If the crew declines, I'll go to plan C.
I'm not sure I'm on the same page about the loss of visual though. While I've seen that happen, I've never seen anyone even suggest violating a crew unless they never reported losing visual, and something dangerous resulted. If you loose sight of the other aircraft and say so, it then becomes our job to re-establish standard separation. That might mean abandon the approach and go-around though.
TIS, this isn't meant to be argumentative, I'm trying to understand the problem better because we sometime find ourselve in a similar operation. Normally vis is not the problem here that is may be in LA though. We don't even try running visuals below about 6 miles surface vis. Nevertheless, It's possible the flight vis is lower.
TIS said:
Well, first there's the simple concept of conducting a visual maneuver by following someone who ISN'T conducting a visual maneuver.
I don't see how this is a problem. Unless your saying the guy ahead is going to follow the loc/gs into IMC conditions. I run practice ILS approaches every day, and almost any day the WX is suitable, there's a visual approach behind the practice ILS.
TIS said:
Then there's the fact that you're doing a visual approach based on having the preceding aircraft in sight - only he's not the preceding aircraft - at least not to YOUR runway.
All quite legal and "safe" according to the FAA and the 7110.65. You may disagree, but the controller is operating by the book. Your problem then is with the "book", and not the controller.
TIS said:
And there's the fact that the guy doing the ILS thinks he's got IFR separation going for him but that separation is being provided, in part, by a guy maintaining visual separation from him.
OK, I'll take this as a compliment. You'd prefer I provide separation than a fellow airline pilot. Even though I might be legal running 1 1/2 miles or even less under certain conditions on parallel ILSs.
TIS said:
Oh, and then there's the fact that most of the guys doing ILSs as a matter of course at LAX are foreign carriers - I'll leave it at that so I don't get in deeper than I already am.
Mmmmm, OK. I always kinda enjoyed working Lufthansa. Nice guys, brought us German beer.
TIS said:
It's just stacking a whole lot of cards in the shape of a house.
TIS
OK TIS, I understand, (I think), you're uncomfortable with some ATC procedures. I'm sure I don't know anyone who likes all of the 7110 any more than every paragraph of Parts 91, 135, and 121.
The flip side of that is that the controllers at NY, ORD, and LAX don't set the arrival rate. Flow control and the shift supervisor do. The controllers are then left to cram 5 lbs into a 4 lb bag. Refer back to ORD in 2000. A dozen controllers were given reprimands and a week or two on the beach for running 3 1/2 miles during a facility evaluation. (An evaluation that ORD had failed for something like the previous six times.) A controller at those places can't keep his
job without running them as tight as the 7110 allows.
We can fix the whole problem just as soon as we get somebody to reduce the arrival rates at those airports, and/or those cities build some more runways and airports.