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Does anyone consider it somewhat dangerous that at your alternate
airport, the weather can be forecast to be as low as your alternate minimums? Seems the potential for problems. For example, using Carlsad California CRQ as the planned alternate, where the VOR-A is the approach you plan to fly if necessary (assume the ils is out). For a cat C aircraft, the alternate minimums are 1000 and 3. The approach minimums are 972 feet height above airfield, and 3 miles without dme. So is this all ok? Stan |
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wrote:
Does anyone consider it somewhat dangerous that at your alternate airport, the weather can be forecast to be as low as your alternate minimums? Seems the potential for problems. There are lots of stupidities in the alternate rules. For example, there's no requirement that your alternate "make sense". Around here, BDR and HVN are about 10 miles apart, both right on the edge of the water. What's happening at one weather-wise is pretty much guaranteed to be happening at the other. Yet, it's perfectly legal for me to file IFR to one and use the other as my alternate. Legal, but pointless. When I'm picking an alternate, my goal is to find someplace that I'm damned sure I can get into if my destination goes down. That implies a much more conservative approach than just meeting the letter of the law. |
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In Canada, the alternate weather minimums are the same 600/2 and 800/2
as the US, but also 300 ft and 1 mile above the mda/dh and vis. Whichever is greater. Your point about 2 places with the same weather phenomena is well taken. Stan On 6 Apr 2005 11:49:53 -0400, (Roy Smith) wrote: There are lots of stupidities in the alternate rules. For example, there's no requirement that your alternate "make sense". |
#5
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You are not required to go to your filed alternate if you cannot get into
your destination; ATC has no idea of what you filed as an alternate. What is the problem?? Bob Gardner wrote in message ... Does anyone consider it somewhat dangerous that at your alternate airport, the weather can be forecast to be as low as your alternate minimums? Seems the potential for problems. For example, using Carlsad California CRQ as the planned alternate, where the VOR-A is the approach you plan to fly if necessary (assume the ils is out). For a cat C aircraft, the alternate minimums are 1000 and 3. The approach minimums are 972 feet height above airfield, and 3 miles without dme. So is this all ok? Stan |
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#7
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Around here, BDR and HVN are about 10 miles apart, both right on the
edge of the water. What's happening at one weather-wise is pretty much guaranteed to be happening at the other. Yet, it's perfectly legal for me to file IFR to one and use the other as my alternate. Legal, but pointless. When I'm picking an alternate, my goal is to find someplace that I'm damned sure I can get into if my destination goes down. That implies a much more conservative approach than just meeting the letter of the law. Sometimes I encounter the opposite problem - there's no real danger of being left without a safe place to go, but it's hard to find a legal alternate within range. This can happen in the summer when there's a slight chance of thunderstorms over a large area. All the forecasts include something like "TEMPO ceiling 500, visibility 1 in heavy rain showers," making them unavailable as alternates, but since the storms are only scattered, there's very little chance that all the airports will be unusable at the same time. |
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Stan, here in Canada, the forecast weather at your alternate must be
at least 300 feet and 1 mile above the approach minimums (or 600/2 or 800/2, whichever is higher). Supposedly to help ensure you can make it in at your alternate. A kind of buffer. I was just surprised to see that in the US, there are no such additives. And so, the alternate weather limits in the US can be the same as the approach limits, in a very **FEW** cases. CRQ was an example I found. As an explanation to why it is only in a "few" cases, I notice in the US that alternate weather limits must be at or above circling approach limits too. And so, **normally** you find straight in approach limits are less that alternate weather limits. Canada does not have that circling minimums requirement as part of alternate weather requirements. On 07 Apr 2005 04:26:10 GMT, Stan Gosnell wrote: wrote in news:kru751l8bu0ve04b4j7gnfdqh2rk39hjlh@ 4ax.com: Does anyone consider it somewhat dangerous that at your alternate airport, the weather can be forecast to be as low as your alternate minimums? Seems the potential for problems. But that's the definition of alternate minimums - the weather must be forecast to be at least as good as the alternate minimums. For example, using Carlsad California CRQ as the planned alternate, where the VOR-A is the approach you plan to fly if necessary (assume the ils is out). For a cat C aircraft, the alternate minimums are 1000 and 3. The approach minimums are 972 feet height above airfield, and 3 miles without dme. Why assume the ILS is out? If it's out, the alternate minimums should be higher. If the permitted approach minimums are 972/3, then that's why the alternate minimums are 1000/3, obviously. So is this all ok? Why wouldn't it be? Maybe I'm misunderstanding your question, but I don't see a problem with any of this, just from your post, no other information available. |
#10
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