A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Instrument Flight Rules
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Contact approach question



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #41  
Old January 19th 05, 01:32 AM
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
news

Let's see: The message he responded to stated "when an instrument letdown
to
a civil airport is necessary". Are you saying the gist of the thread was
the opposite of this?


No.



I'm trying to figure out why he's addressing an instrument letdown being
necessary and your addressing visual letdown.


It's the other way round.


  #42  
Old January 19th 05, 01:45 AM
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
news

Seems obvious to me. Why is McNicoll changing the context 180 degrees?


Seems you and Paul made the same mistake.


  #43  
Old January 19th 05, 01:45 AM
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...

The only failure was your change in context.


That didn't happen.


  #44  
Old January 19th 05, 02:00 AM
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote in message
...
On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 18:29:58 -0700, "Matt Barrow"
wrote:


"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
link.net...

"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...

Paul stated "canceling when you have sufficient visibility..." which
indicates a change in status/condition/visibility (at the point

visibility
becomes adequate).


Paul wasn't following the thread very closely. The message he responded

to
stated "when an instrument letdown to a civil airport is necessary". As
I
said, if you can operate under VFR an instrument letdown wouldn't be
necessary.


Let's see: The message he responded to stated "when an instrument letdown
to
a civil airport is necessary". Are you saying the gist of the thread was
the opposite of this?

Your reply infers that there was adequate visibility prior to that.


No, you're inferring.


I'm trying to figure out why he's addressing an instrument letdown being
necessary and your addressing visual letdown.



Because the original post described a situation which required an
instrument letdown, namely landing under IFR.


He's got it backward. It was I that addressed an instrument letdown being
necessary and Paul that addressed a visual letdown.


  #45  
Old January 19th 05, 02:22 AM
Paul Tomblin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In a previous article, "Steven P. McNicoll" said:
wrote in message
Because the original post described a situation which required an
instrument letdown, namely landing under IFR.

He's got it backward. It was I that addressed an instrument letdown being
necessary and Paul that addressed a visual letdown.


No, I was *asking* a question, not stating something was possible. You
see, I didn't know if when you can see the runway and everything between
you and it, you can use a contact approach and/or cancel and land VFR
regardless of whether the tower is reporting IFR visibilities. But while
I got an answer about the contact approach thing, I never got an answer
about cancelling. Instead of an answer, all I get is people quoting rules
without explaining how they are relevant to the question. Which is par
for the course around here, it seems.

--
Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/
Just another organic pain collector racing to oblivion
  #46  
Old January 19th 05, 02:38 AM
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message
...

No, I was *asking* a question, not stating something was possible.


Which question? I believe you asked several.



You see, I didn't know if when you can see the runway and everything
between
you and it, you can use a contact approach and/or cancel and land VFR
regardless of whether the tower is reporting IFR visibilities.


You can use a contact approach whenever the required conditions are met.
Seeing the runway is not one of the required conditions, by the way. Are
you asking if one can cancel IFR and land VFR when it's below VFR minima?
No, one cannot do that.



But while I got an answer about the contact approach thing, I never got an
answer
about cancelling. Instead of an answer, all I get is people quoting rules
without explaining how they are relevant to the question. Which is par
for the course around here, it seems.


Perhaps nobody understood you were asking such a basic question. You can
cancel IFR whenever you are in VFR conditions. You cannot cancel IFR and
proceed VFR when you are in IFR conditions.


  #47  
Old January 19th 05, 04:02 AM
Newps
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Paul Tomblin wrote:



We were talking about cancelling the IFR clearance and proceeding VFR when
you piped up with this "you've got to fly the instrument procedure"
business. He's not flying a "home-made procedure", he's proceeding VFR.


Nope, can't do that, the field is IFR.
  #48  
Old January 19th 05, 04:09 AM
Newps
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Paul Tomblin wrote:

You
see, I didn't know if when you can see the runway and everything between
you and it, you can use a contact approach and/or cancel and land VFR
regardless of whether the tower is reporting IFR visibilities.


No you cannot. If the field is IFR you must land under IFR, you may not
cancel. At a towered airport there's really no reason to cancel. You
may not get a contact approach either as that requires a mile vis. The
instrument approach merely puts you in a position to see the runway. At
some airports, the one I work at is one, we get conditions due to local
terrain where one half the airport is 0/0. The other half is clear and
a million. Legally you need an instrument approach to land. However
there's no reason to fly an extra 10-20 miles after receipt of said
clearance before landing. Once you have the runway in sight you proceed
visually to your runway. Very simple.


  #49  
Old January 19th 05, 04:48 AM
Ron Garret
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article ,
Newps wrote:

Paul Tomblin wrote:

You
see, I didn't know if when you can see the runway and everything between
you and it, you can use a contact approach and/or cancel and land VFR
regardless of whether the tower is reporting IFR visibilities.


No you cannot. If the field is IFR you must land under IFR, you may not
cancel. At a towered airport there's really no reason to cancel. You
may not get a contact approach either as that requires a mile vis. The
instrument approach merely puts you in a position to see the runway. At
some airports, the one I work at is one, we get conditions due to local
terrain where one half the airport is 0/0. The other half is clear and
a million. Legally you need an instrument approach to land. However
there's no reason to fly an extra 10-20 miles after receipt of said
clearance before landing.


There is if you want to keep your ticket.

Once you have the runway in sight you proceed
visually to your runway. Very simple.


Simple, but illegal. You can only descend below minimums once you have
the field in sight AND you're on the final approach segment (and, if you
really want to pick nits, have reached DH or MDA). If you're on an IFR
clearance, busting minimums is busting minimums even if you and the
airport you're heading to and everything in between is CAVU.

rg
  #50  
Old January 19th 05, 11:49 AM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 21:09:57 -0700, Newps wrote:

Legally you need an instrument approach to land. However
there's no reason to fly an extra 10-20 miles after receipt of said
clearance before landing. Once you have the runway in sight you proceed
visually to your runway. Very simple.


As it has been pointed out, there is a reason to fly those extra 10-20
miles, unless you have been otherwise authorized to not do so.

There are regulations that require it.
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
GPS approach question Matt Whiting Instrument Flight Rules 30 August 29th 08 03:54 AM
GPS approach question Matt Whiting Instrument Flight Rules 8 November 1st 04 10:51 PM
VOR/DME Approach Question Chip Jones Instrument Flight Rules 47 August 29th 04 05:03 AM
Canadian holding procedures Derrick Early Instrument Flight Rules 24 July 22nd 04 04:03 PM
Established on the approach - Checkride question endre Instrument Flight Rules 59 October 6th 03 04:36 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:13 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.