poadeleted20
Deleted
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- Apr 8, 2005
- Messages
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Let me quote the FAA guidance on visual approaches from the official FAA AIM web site:Ed Guthrie said:Well, let's first dismember the highlighted misinformation above: Totally incorrect. Totally.
a. A visual approach is conducted on an IFR flight plan and authorizes a pilot to proceed visually and clear of clouds to the airport. The pilot must have either the airport or the preceding identified aircraft in sight. This approach must be authorized and controlled by the appropriate air traffic control facility. Reported weather at the airport must have a ceiling at or above 1,000 feet and visibility 3 miles or greater. ATC may authorize this type approach when it will be operationally beneficial. Visual approaches are an IFR procedure conducted under IFR in visual meteorological conditions. Cloud clearance requirements of 14 CFR Section 91.155 are not applicable, unless required by operation specifications.
b. Operating to an Airport Without Weather Reporting Service. ATC will advise the pilot when weather is not available at the destination airport. ATC may initiate a visual approach provided there is a reasonable assurance that weather at the airport is a ceiling at or above 1,000 feet and visibility 3 miles or greater (e.g., area weather reports, PIREPs, etc.). [emphasis added]
There has to be some sort of weather information on the destination airport that says the weather is better than 1000-3 before ATC can give you a visual, and the question as posed by the examiner does not include any "reasonable assurance that weather at the airport is a ceiling at or above 1,000 feet and visibility 3 miles or greater." I apologize for neglecting the second paragraph in my original post, but I stand by my statement that in the DPE's question as given (no SIAP and observed IMC conditions), a visual approach approach is not an option.
But all that aside, the DPE's actual question was "What type of approach clearance do you ask ATC for?" It was not "Is a visual approach to Airport A legal in these conditions?" Therefore, the answer given ("I'd ask for a SIAP to Airport B") is simply not wrong. A pilot may choose at any time for any reason to divert, and weather concerns are a valid reason for doing that. That the pilot's personal weather minimums are higher than the FAA's is not a reason to bust the person on the checkride as long as the person knows the rules (which weren't asked) and flies the approach to published mins on the flight portion. In fact, under the conditions given, it can easily be argued that the applicant's answer (SIAP to a divert airport rather than attempted visual to the destination in marginal conditions) shows good judgement.
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