A
Anon
Guest
I was flying and there was a very thin fog layer. I'm in a single engine LPV approach equipped airplane with autopilot but the only approach to the airport is a RNAV-A with mins 600 AGL and 1 SM. ATIS said 1/2 sm and Vertical Visibility 100 ft. Approaching the airport I could see through the fog to the ground, could see the lower floors of tall buildings in the distance, etc. and wanted to try the approach. Bing pt 91 I assumed this was legal.
Approach control clears me for the approach but when I check in with the tower they initially day "I can't allow you to enter the class D, visibility is less than 1 sm". I respond that I'd like to continue the approach if possible. They then respond that weather is below "our minimums here in the tower". Now I'm pretty confused and just say I'd like to continue the approach legally. Tower then says "this is a first for me, I guess continue". Then as I'm approaching 1000 AGL, not yet in the fog, a few miles from the airport tower calls a missed on me and says "fly published missed approach now". On the missed of course I see the runway clearly but I comply anyway, end up diverting. Weather gets worse and due to travel plans the airplane is stranded for days. I am fairly confident I could've had a successful approach if left alone and cleared to land.
Now, I realize that during the circle as I got into the fog I may have lost sight of the airport since the straight down vis is often much greater than the horizontal vis. I would've like to have been able to make that decision myself and gone missed if necessary.
Is there anything I should've done differently? Should I have been more assertive? When the tower said "weather is below minimums" I started to think there was some special rule for this airspace I didn't know about, especially since they initially just tried to deny me entry. In the end I think it was just a tower controlle who didn't understand the regs, but was I in the wrong here? I didn't really want to arguing with a controller while I'm flying in marginal weather so I just followed their instruction, even though I think it was wrong.
Thanks!
Approach control clears me for the approach but when I check in with the tower they initially day "I can't allow you to enter the class D, visibility is less than 1 sm". I respond that I'd like to continue the approach if possible. They then respond that weather is below "our minimums here in the tower". Now I'm pretty confused and just say I'd like to continue the approach legally. Tower then says "this is a first for me, I guess continue". Then as I'm approaching 1000 AGL, not yet in the fog, a few miles from the airport tower calls a missed on me and says "fly published missed approach now". On the missed of course I see the runway clearly but I comply anyway, end up diverting. Weather gets worse and due to travel plans the airplane is stranded for days. I am fairly confident I could've had a successful approach if left alone and cleared to land.
Now, I realize that during the circle as I got into the fog I may have lost sight of the airport since the straight down vis is often much greater than the horizontal vis. I would've like to have been able to make that decision myself and gone missed if necessary.
Is there anything I should've done differently? Should I have been more assertive? When the tower said "weather is below minimums" I started to think there was some special rule for this airspace I didn't know about, especially since they initially just tried to deny me entry. In the end I think it was just a tower controlle who didn't understand the regs, but was I in the wrong here? I didn't really want to arguing with a controller while I'm flying in marginal weather so I just followed their instruction, even though I think it was wrong.
Thanks!