gismo
Touchdown! Greaser!
I forget where I saw it but I could swear I once found a listing of lat/lon coordinates for the ends of each paved runway at all public airports. Baring that you could either measure the distance from the ref point to the runway ends on an airport diagram (AOPA as diagrams for most) or map it out on one of the online overhead image sites. In either case make sure you're using the same cartographic coordinate format (e.g. hh:mm:sec.tenths vs hh:min.hundredths). You'd also be pretty close if you added half the runway length to the distance from the reference since most ref points are near the middle of the airport.But for that to work I'd have to get the runway threshold into the GPS database as a user waypoint. I wonder if I could do that with the necessary precision in flight. If I knew exactly where the airport reference location was I could calculate it, but I'm not confident enough that I wouldn't overlook some correction that would put the waypoint far enough off to make it dangerous to fly for real.
If I understand what you're describing it sounds OK. Sounds like it would require a trip to the same airport in visual conditions though (not a bad idea).OTOH, if the obstacles to be cleared are within 1nm of the airport reference location (so that the GPS is displaying the distance in hundredths), and as long as the reference location is somewhere well past the threshold, I don't see why I couldn't just use the reference location, noting the distance to that point along the extended centerline upon passing over the last obstacle and then when flying for real, beginning my descent from a predetermined "MDA" that has sufficient obstacle clearance (taking into account altimeter errors). That should definitely work at 3DA and probably at 76G too.