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#1
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Let's say your 15 miles from your home airport in VMC, not on a flight
plan. You know the area well. On your way, unforecast conditions (snow) causes visibility to start dropping below 3 miles. Ceilings are at 1800. You are just below the ceiling. You know the area well enough to do a contact approach safely, even though the MSA for the area is 3000 ft MSL (2000 ft AGL). Seems like the right thing to do in such a situation is to call ATC, tell them your situation (although I am not sure precisely what one would say), and ask for an on-the-fly IFR contact approach clearance. It seems like seeking a full IFR approach causes one to go up into the clouds and risk icing, and so would be a less safe alternative. Opinions? -Sami N2057M, Piper Turbo Arrrow III |
#2
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O. Sami Saydjari wrote:
Let's say your 15 miles from your home airport in VMC, not on a flight plan. You know the area well. On your way, unforecast conditions (snow) causes visibility to start dropping below 3 miles. Ceilings are at 1800. You are just below the ceiling. You know the area well enough to do a contact approach safely, even though the MSA for the area is 3000 ft MSL (2000 ft AGL). Seems like the right thing to do in such a situation is to call ATC, tell them your situation (although I am not sure precisely what one would say), and ask for an on-the-fly IFR contact approach clearance. It seems like seeking a full IFR approach causes one to go up into the clouds and risk icing, and so would be a less safe alternative. Opinions? A few thoughts: First, what is the MEA or probably more accurate, the controller's MVA (minimum vectoring altitude) for the area in which you were flying when visibility dropped? Perhaps you could have requested a pop-up IFR clearance that kept you below the clouds. Another option is to request "special VFR." That will keep you VFR but legally allow you to enter the airport's airspace and land with 1 mile visibility and clear of clouds. Of course, there are several class B airports that do not allow special VFR and requesting it at an airport that does allow it doesn't necessarily guarantee you will receive it, which leads to the third option: Do a 180 and find a nearby airport outside the lower visibility. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#3
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Peter R. wrote:
First, what is the MEA or probably more accurate Sorry about that. I wasn't reading your post close enough to see that you mentioned MEA. I have found that the MVA often is lower than the published MEA, though, so that question would still be valid. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#4
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I read allot of NTSB reports, you see allot of ATP rated pilots who "know
the area" and cancel IFR only to end up in the NTSB report for crashing. the SAFE thing to do is to call center/ATC and tell them visibility just went below VFR minimums and you would like to know if you can get a instrument clearance from them. I have done this in the past and had no problems, but you never can tell untill you ask. the other option would be to call FSS on your radio and file the IFR flight plan. your 15 minutes out, so you have only about 12-14 minutes to go. I took off from north las vegas a couple of months ago for a short hop, when I turned around and came back, the area was fogged/smogged in and I did not think I would have the visibility so I called Nellis approach and told them I did not think I could continue VFR, they asked if I was instrument rated, I told them yes, they took my information and gave me a clearance. They did tell me they had some IFR departures and it would be about 10 minutes before they could handle me and told me to could do some "boxes" or s-turns where I was, But it went smoothly. I think allot of how it goes depends on the controller, some controllers are not so, accomdating, and some are really great. "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: Let's say your 15 miles from your home airport in VMC, not on a flight plan. You know the area well. On your way, unforecast conditions (snow) causes visibility to start dropping below 3 miles. Ceilings are at 1800. You are just below the ceiling. You know the area well enough to do a contact approach safely, even though the MSA for the area is 3000 ft MSL (2000 ft AGL). Seems like the right thing to do in such a situation is to call ATC, tell them your situation (although I am not sure precisely what one would say), and ask for an on-the-fly IFR contact approach clearance. It seems like seeking a full IFR approach causes one to go up into the clouds and risk icing, and so would be a less safe alternative. Opinions? -Sami N2057M, Piper Turbo Arrrow III |
#5
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On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 10:52:15 -0600, "O. Sami Saydjari"
wrote: Let's say your 15 miles from your home airport in VMC, not on a flight plan. You know the area well. On your way, unforecast conditions (snow) causes visibility to start dropping below 3 miles. Ceilings are at 1800. You are just below the ceiling. You know the area well enough to do a contact approach safely, even though the MSA for the area is 3000 ft MSL (2000 ft AGL). Seems like the right thing to do in such a situation is to call ATC, tell them your situation (although I am not sure precisely what one would say), and ask for an on-the-fly IFR contact approach clearance. It seems like seeking a full IFR approach causes one to go up into the clouds and risk icing, and so would be a less safe alternative. Opinions? -Sami N2057M, Piper Turbo Arrrow III We're talking non-emergency situations here. There's usually little problem in obtaining a pop-up clearance. Once in a while a controller is too busy; and in those instances you file with FSS and then call for your clearance. However, in the situation you put forth, I would disagree about the safety of a contact approach. If you already have unforecast conditions, how do you know that the visibility won't drop below that required for a contact approach? I sure would not be asking for a contact approach under those circumstances. If you are worried about icing in the clouds (unlikely with snow, but not impossible), then your "safe" alternative would be to remain in VMC and find an airport that is not covered by ice-laden clouds. And I've been in a similar situation, although not worried about icing. I was returning to KASH about an hour or two before it was forecast to have IMC conditions due to snow. Cleared for the VOR 32 approach into KASH. The FAF was severe clear and, about one minute before crossing the FAF, the tower was reporting 1 mile visibility in snow. By the time I got to the MAP, the tower was reporting 0/0 and I could not see anything at MDA. I executed a missed approach; returned to VMC, and diverted to another airport. Had my radios gone out, I still would have had a defined procedure to follow. (And I did have a generator failure after landing at KLWM). I've requested and received contact approaches, but I use them in stable weather conditions, when there is a clear operational advantage. I would not request a contact approach if the weather is already behaving worse than forecast. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#6
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"O. Sami Saydjari" wrote in message ...
Seems like the right thing to do in such a situation is to call ATC, tell them your situation (although I am not sure precisely what one would say), and ask for an on-the-fly IFR contact approach clearance. I'd say, "XXX Approach, Learjet 12345 15 west of YYY, 2300 feet, request local IFR clearance to YYY starting with a contact approach." It seems like seeking a full IFR approach causes one to go up into the clouds and risk icing, and so would be a less safe alternative. Makes sense to me. |
#7
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Peter R. wrote in message ...
Do a 180 and find a nearby airport outside the lower visibility. That might be the right answer for a non-rated PPL, but with 3SM visibility and 1800ft ceiling, there's no good reason to do that if you can just get an IFR clearance and continue. |
#8
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Jeff wrote in message ...
I read allot of NTSB reports, you see allot of ATP rated pilots who "know the area" and cancel IFR only to end up in the NTSB report for crashing. Well then, it's a good thing he's not considering doing that, because he'd certainly crash. the SAFE thing to do is to call center/ATC and tell them visibility just went below VFR minimums and you would like to know if you can get a instrument clearance from them. Well then, it's a good thing he's asking about doing that! ;-) |
#9
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In article ,
Ron Rosenfeld wrote: tower was reporting 1 mile visibility in snow. By the time I got to the MAP, the tower was reporting 0/0 and I could not see anything at MDA. I executed a missed approach; returned to VMC, and diverted to another airport. Had my radios gone out, I still would have had a defined procedure to follow. (And I did have a generator failure after landing at KLWM). You picked an alternate when you got a pop-up clearance for an approach? -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#10
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On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 15:51:32 -0800, Jeff wrote:
I read allot of NTSB reports, you see allot of ATP rated pilots who "know the area" and cancel IFR only to end up in the NTSB report for crashing. the SAFE thing to do is to call center/ATC and tell them visibility just went below VFR minimums and you would like to know if you can get a instrument clearance from them. I have done this in the past and had no problems, but you never can tell untill you ask. the other option would be to call FSS on your radio and file the IFR flight plan. snip I've been shooting practice approaches in just barely legal conditions when things turned to crap in a hurry. A quick call.... Ahhh MBS approach, things are going down hill in a hurry and we are not going to be able to maintain VFR. We'd like to go IFR and land if possible. We received a wait one while they quickly handled a couple other planes and came back with a clearance. Admittedly we could have scudd run for home (which is only 11 miles) but in this particular case we were already being vectored for the ILS. Yes, my car was back at 3BS, but we had an ILS with vectors and ceilings were well above minimums which are 200 feet. Staying VFR the 11 miles and getting into 3BS was not a sure thing. Yes, we could have filed, but at that moment it was in doubt whether the VOR had minimums or not (a tad over 500 feet) We landed, parked and a couple cups of coffee later were ready for departure as things were clearing up. It's been my experience, although some what limited, that ATC is going to do their darndest to get you on the ground and out of the soup as soon as they can. They do not want a statistic in their area any more than you do. OTOH I was IFR on top of a deck (which was no more than a couple hundred feet below us most of the time, but above us once in a while- I was not IFR to on top) when I heard a King Air call in to Minneapolis Center asking for a pop up. Minneapolis Center was busier than the proverbial cat on a marble floor and hauling dirt two miles. They promptly sent them to FSS to file. There was a brief pause and they replied. About 5 minutes later the King Air was back saying they could not contact FSS. ATC was clearly not happy (you could hear it in the controller's voice) as they could have filed on the ground with a clearance limit. It was also apparent they had climbed on top and then called, to any one in the area. There were no holes in the whole area with ceilings at less than 1000 and tops at 7000 to 8000 plus. That time they let them file. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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