Yes and no. There are those who are very experienced doing it. And some of them have got bit doing it. As in trapped and crash. But the great majority of us (including myself) should not attempt it.
Rare instrument pilot? Why do you consider it rare? Many have an instrument rating. Many "scud runners" do too. Not really related to scud running.
YesI think he meant rare as in rarely flies IMC..
Did either one file a flight plan?
I'd think scud running is a lot harder than it used to be, cell towers are everywhere.
It's actually a lot easier and arguably safer than it used to be with the proliferation of in-cockpit weather combined with terrain/obstacle data and SVT.I'd think scud running is a lot harder than it used to be, cell towers are everywhere.
I call scud running having to fly at altitudes below the VFR sectional sector altitudes. I don't like to fly very long in visibility less than 5 or miles. My eyes get too tired.
Successful scud running only builds false sense of security that the only skill is to know when to duck early and land. Really no skill behind that. Low time or rusty IR'd pilot can put one self several miles behind the A/C on a busy approach, but there should be some sense of skill keeping the wings level -- so looking at just those choices, 'B' for safer.
I'd think scud running is a lot harder than it used to be, cell towers are everywhere.
First, I believe this discussion is useless without a clear definition of scud running.
That said, an experienced pilot flying at legal visibility minimums with adequate ceiling to always be at legal minimum altitudes can be significantly safer than one who ventures intentionally in the clouds with bare minimum recency. In fact, I've spent significant amounts of time VFR down low when it probably would've been fatal for me as a very proficient instrument pilot to venture in the clouds.
There are significant skills beyond being able to "duck early and land". Can you plot your position with a pencil point as you fly, or do you have a larger margin of error in your navigation? Do you fly the magenta line or just follow roads to navigate, or do you adjust your route to make it more advantageous? How's your weather knowlege? Can you say with confidence that this minimum weather will stay the same or improve rather than getting worse? How do you evaluate that in flight? What's your plan if you're wrong? If you have to land, can you safely select from any number of terrain options, or are you limited to runways?
The list goes on for quite a while. If you haven't even thought about those issues, yes, you're unsafe. And not "just" for low VFR...I've seen my share of 2000 & 5 forecasts that became a 300 & 1 reality without nearby airport options.
Silly topic. Scud running is an imaginary exercise for most of you. Weather and visibility are relative to the airplane speed. What I can do in a Cub has little to do with what you go-fast guys think you can't do.
Again, defining terms is important..."VFR conditions" actually means different things to different people. 500 & 1, 1000 & 3, and 3000 & 5 are all define a minimum VFR condition for something, and obviously there's a large disparity in those definitions.I just assumed the term scud running was known flight in less than VFR conditions (forecasted or not).
Except that one good reason for "scud running" is that IMC would be fatal for one reason or another.If your going to scud run on a regular basis,i would hope you have the ability to transition to IFR,if the need arises.
Exactly. I was doing what some would call scud running in my Waco once flying it home from Tennessee. Ceilings were lower than forecast and the terrain was rising going east. I followed the highway hoping to break through, but the ceiling wasn't lifting and terrain continued to rise. Even though I knew it was only about 15 miles to VFR conditions, there was no way I was going to climb into the clouds in an airplane that wasn't equipped forExcept that one good reason for "scud running" is that IMC would be fatal for one reason or another.
Exactly. I was doing what some would call scud running in my Waco once flying it home from Tennessee. Ceilings were lower than forecast and the terrain was rising going east. I followed the highway hoping to break through, but the ceiling wasn't lifting and terrain continued to rise. Even though I knew it was only about 15 miles to VFR conditions, there was no way I was going to climb into the clouds in an airplane that wasn't equipped for
IFR and temps were right around freezing.
My only choice was to turn back.