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#1
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![]() Tonight I was flying back to SQL GPS 30. There was a dense, 100' thick ceiling covering half the airport at 800' AGL/MSL. I was in VMC the whole time yet it probably would have been illegal to fly in VFR as I would have been close to the clouds (see note below about this). So even though visibility was 10nm below the clouds, only have the airport had the ceiling and I never passed through any clouds, I presume I can still log this as an approach in "actual." So can you actually log an approach in actual and never go through IMC? Sounds strange but I guess you are able to do this. Same goes passing through a broken layer. Note: my passenger picked out a plane probably at about 600' flying from PAO to SQL while I was on final. I called out on CTAF (tower was closed) and didn't hear anything. I wouldn't be surprised they kept hush knowing they were breaking the regulations. I had not cancelled IFR and was on the approach and ended up doing a 360 and climbing. I contacted approach immediately telling him what I was doing but it could have caused a go around for a heavy if there was an inbound a/c going into SFO. Fortunately no one was around. Fortunately my passenger saw the traffic as they were below me, I was in a low wing, night, with clouds around and I wasn't expecting him. Gerald |
#2
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On Thu, 08 Sep 2005 07:05:48 GMT, Gerald Sylvester
wrote: So can you actually log an approach in actual and never go through IMC? Huh? What definitions are you using for "actual" and "IMC"? Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#3
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I wojuld say no. You made a vistual approach in VMC.
Mike MU-2 "Gerald Sylvester" wrote in message m... Tonight I was flying back to SQL GPS 30. There was a dense, 100' thick ceiling covering half the airport at 800' AGL/MSL. I was in VMC the whole time yet it probably would have been illegal to fly in VFR as I would have been close to the clouds (see note below about this). So even though visibility was 10nm below the clouds, only have the airport had the ceiling and I never passed through any clouds, I presume I can still log this as an approach in "actual." So can you actually log an approach in actual and never go through IMC? Sounds strange but I guess you are able to do this. Same goes passing through a broken layer. Note: my passenger picked out a plane probably at about 600' flying from PAO to SQL while I was on final. I called out on CTAF (tower was closed) and didn't hear anything. I wouldn't be surprised they kept hush knowing they were breaking the regulations. I had not cancelled IFR and was on the approach and ended up doing a 360 and climbing. I contacted approach immediately telling him what I was doing but it could have caused a go around for a heavy if there was an inbound a/c going into SFO. Fortunately no one was around. Fortunately my passenger saw the traffic as they were below me, I was in a low wing, night, with clouds around and I wasn't expecting him. Gerald |
#4
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Of course not. Surprised that you would ask the question.
Bob Gardner "Gerald Sylvester" wrote in message m... Tonight I was flying back to SQL GPS 30. There was a dense, 100' thick ceiling covering half the airport at 800' AGL/MSL. I was in VMC the whole time yet it probably would have been illegal to fly in VFR as I would have been close to the clouds (see note below about this). So even though visibility was 10nm below the clouds, only have the airport had the ceiling and I never passed through any clouds, I presume I can still log this as an approach in "actual." So can you actually log an approach in actual and never go through IMC? Sounds strange but I guess you are able to do this. Same goes passing through a broken layer. Note: my passenger picked out a plane probably at about 600' flying from PAO to SQL while I was on final. I called out on CTAF (tower was closed) and didn't hear anything. I wouldn't be surprised they kept hush knowing they were breaking the regulations. I had not cancelled IFR and was on the approach and ended up doing a 360 and climbing. I contacted approach immediately telling him what I was doing but it could have caused a go around for a heavy if there was an inbound a/c going into SFO. Fortunately no one was around. Fortunately my passenger saw the traffic as they were below me, I was in a low wing, night, with clouds around and I wasn't expecting him. Gerald |
#5
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#6
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Mike Rapoport wrote:
I wojuld say no. You made a vistual approach in VMC. It was not a 'visual approach.' I required a GPS approach but the approach kept me in VMC that was below VFR.... (500 below, 1000 feet above, etc. for each airspace). Gerald |
#7
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![]() : What definitions are you using for "actual" and "IMC"? I think Cory understood me better than I did. grin sorry everyone that my flying is more precise than my english. ![]() I think the distinction is "below VFR minimums" vs. "controlling the aircraft soley by reference to instruments." There *is* a difference... one can be flying by outside references in 1 mile, clear of clouds. In controlled airspace this is not legal VFR conditions (SVFR, perhaps). Correct. Is it "actual" IMC? Not really... if you're still able to control the aircraft based on visual references. ok. But I guess it is somewhat of a judgement call. Kind of like flying at night with no lights on the ground and no horizon. Almost like last night flying out of PRB. I've never heard of logging an approach actual or simulated... just actual/simulated *time*. I knew that. I remember a number of months ago there was a discussion as to what qualifies as an approach you can log for currency. What I took from there was that if you required the approach to get through any non-VFR weather during the approach, then people were logging it. So like last night, I needed that approach to get into SQL. SQL was not VFR (despite the moron flying at tree top levels with no radio). Nonetheless I had visual cues. So I required the approach but I had visual cues (but was flying 90% on my instruments expecting to have to pop through a marine layer). Can I log this? |
#8
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![]() "Gerald Sylvester" wrote in message m... Tonight I was flying back to SQL GPS 30. There was a dense, 100' thick ceiling covering half the airport at 800' AGL/MSL. I was in VMC the whole time yet it probably would have been illegal to fly in VFR as I would have been close to the clouds (see note below about this). So even though visibility was 10nm below the clouds, only have the airport had the ceiling and I never passed through any clouds, I presume I can still log this as an approach in "actual." So can you actually log an approach in actual and never go through IMC? Sounds strange but I guess you are able to do this. Same goes passing through a broken layer. Note: my passenger picked out a plane probably at about 600' flying from PAO to SQL while I was on final. I called out on CTAF (tower was closed) and didn't hear anything. I wouldn't be surprised they kept hush knowing they were breaking the regulations. I had not cancelled IFR and was on the approach and ended up doing a 360 and climbing. I contacted approach immediately telling him what I was doing but it could have caused a go around for a heavy if there was an inbound a/c going into SFO. Fortunately no one was around. Fortunately my passenger saw the traffic as they were below me, I was in a low wing, night, with clouds around and I wasn't expecting him. Gerald The way I do it is based on whether I feel it really contributed to my currency or not. E.g. if I was using "flight by sole reference to instruments" for "most" of the time from the time I began the approach, until after the FAF (or GS intercept), I will probably log it. There are some (including at the FAA) that believe that you must be on "sole reference" down to the DH/MDA, but in practice I am not that conservative. For the situation you describe I would not log the approach, mainly because there was little or no "sole reference to instruments". Also BTW, terminology wise I subscribe to the school of thought that what you referred to as "VMC but too close to the clouds to fly legally VFR", is actually IMC-- even though you are flying visually! Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
#9
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Gerald Sylvester wrote:
Mike Rapoport wrote: I wojuld say no. You made a vistual approach in VMC. It was not a 'visual approach.' I required a GPS approach but the approach kept me in VMC that was below VFR.... (500 below, 1000 feet above, etc. for each airspace). Could you control the aircraft using outside references (only)? Hilton |
#10
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Gerald Sylvester wrote:
So I required the approach but I had visual cues (but was flying 90% on my instruments expecting to have to pop through a marine layer). Can I log this? Since there is no definition on what constitutes a loggable approach, all comments here are just opinions - here's mine. Expectation has nothing to do with it. Could you have flown the approach visually (even if you were just 1' from the clouds the whole way down)? I have flown numerous instrument approaches that clearly were not in VMC, but not in the clouds (i.e. didn't have VFR cloud clearances). I don't log those approaches. In essence (correct me if I'm wrong), it could have been a perfectly VFR day and you were simply head down flying the instruments - that does not constitute a loggable instrument approach in my *opinion*. My *opinion* is that you really must need to use the instruments to get to the airport. Hilton |
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