Ok, hopefully people will be constructive here. This is in reference to the scenario described here. I would like to discuss ways to deal with this if I had not been able to do it VFR. Again, the issue was that I could not safely get visual on the airport while remaining VFR due to the cloud bases being right around the mountain peaks.
I am going to explain the plan I was considering at the time. I would like to hear thoughts and better ideas. I honestly don't think it would have been a big deal because the cloud bases were so high. I just would have needed to violate the VFR cloud separation rules.
The airport I was going into had an RNAV approach. I had plates, a VFR gps in the panel, and foreflight on my iPad. My plan was to tell ATC what my situation was and ask for vectors for as long as I could stay in contact with them and fly the approach a 1000 feet above the numbers on the approach. Letting ATC in on the plan would allow them to keep other IFR traffic away from me. I figured, with 3000 foot AGL cloud bases, I should have broken out still being pretty darn high and following the approach with the VFR GPS would keep me close enough to have a margin for error. I think it would have been very easy to do and other than violating the VFR cloud rules, no issue at all.
I am going to explain the plan I was considering at the time. I would like to hear thoughts and better ideas. I honestly don't think it would have been a big deal because the cloud bases were so high. I just would have needed to violate the VFR cloud separation rules.
The airport I was going into had an RNAV approach. I had plates, a VFR gps in the panel, and foreflight on my iPad. My plan was to tell ATC what my situation was and ask for vectors for as long as I could stay in contact with them and fly the approach a 1000 feet above the numbers on the approach. Letting ATC in on the plan would allow them to keep other IFR traffic away from me. I figured, with 3000 foot AGL cloud bases, I should have broken out still being pretty darn high and following the approach with the VFR GPS would keep me close enough to have a margin for error. I think it would have been very easy to do and other than violating the VFR cloud rules, no issue at all.