z987k
Well-Known Member
Emphasis mine.No person may take off an aircraft under IFR or begin an IFR or over-the-top operation unless the latest weather reports or forecasts, or any combination of them, indicate that weather conditions at the estimated time of arrival at the next airport of intended landing will be at or above authorized IFR landing minimums.
So we were having a discussion today on whether we could launch for an airport whose forecast is below mins, but actually weather for the last many hours has been significantly above mins.
People don't actually go to their filed airport all the time with VFR airports. File to ABC 5nm from XYZ, cancel when you get close and go to the VFR airport, which may not ever have weather, so you really have no official way of knowing if the "airport of intended landing" is VFR.
An example under IFR - say I want to go from PDX to BFI, but BFI is down because the forecast says M1/4 for your ETA, while the METAR for the last two hours, which are included in the forecast time has been 1.5SM. PAE however has a good forecast and current conditions. So we launch for PAE, with the intention of changing our destination to BFI should it be above mins once we pick up the ATIS there. If it is not, we go to PAE.
Slight change, what if once we get the ATIS at BFI and it is no good, we just go back to PDX(had almost no intention of actually landing at PAE save an emergency)?
Legal?