Flown a CRJ, A320, and 737. Don’t ever recall entering/being at jet TPA of 1,500 agl entering downwind of the runway. We’ve always been vectored or flown the full procedure. Full disclaimer, I’ve only flown 121 for commercial ops.
and it’s just a matter of different ops at different 121 carriers, or even different ops between most 121 and 91/135. We go to lots of fields that have no radar vectoring or no TRACON, and regularly have to enter a traffic pattern like any other aircraft, often mixed with all kinds of other aircraft. So, we train to it, to where it’s nothing unusual or out of the ordinary.
Heck, mil big jets like KC-135, KC-10, C-5, C-141…they do touch and goes and traffic patterns all day during transition training, often combined with practice circling approach termination. A lot of airline guys can’t fathom a touch and go in a big jet, because that’s never normally done….other than back in the day when I used to watch America West beat up the pattern at night doing aircraft training in a 737. It’s merely a matter of training the deconfiguring/reconfiguring just after the touch part, and before the go part, to where it’s completely second nature. Then, it’s just like doing touch and goes in any other aircraft, just with a few more steps.
Fair point, and you are right about airports for 121 vs 91 or 135. But those additional challenges (re: circle approaches) adds another layer of risk to those operations. To your point, if managed properly, not a big deal. But it also presents more opportunity to mess up and result in an ustable state. Also, how many Lear 35s have FOQA? If those 91 or 135s mess up routinely in a certain approach, does anyone really know? Or care? All our planes have FOQA recorders. If we screw up it makes a log and de-identified data is used to identify patterns. In a case like this, they could say “hey, at our home base we see too many planes turning at 400ft AGL in the circle. Let’s do this instead…”
training, experience, and currency….along with preplanning, SA, and smooth aircraft control, and not doing any of the gotchas from the previous post of mine, and you are able to manage the risk pretty well with these. As far as FOQA, that would be a nice to have, but with many small flight departments of a few aircraft and people, it may not be practical and the onus rests on the crews to talk amongst one another and share information and experiences, and recommendations.
Don’t forget many pilots have “circle to land restricted to VMC only” for their ATP certificate (mine doesn’t). And all my 121 jet types have the circle VMC only for the jet type ratings (CL65, A320, 737).
Circle VMC only? I’m not convinced they were at Gillespie. That door bell camera view doesn’t paint a good picture.
mine are unrestricted, but that doesn’t change anything with how I do a circle, as in I don’t take more risks or such due to no restriction. But on a night circle, it’s easy for things to look fine and no notice a thin layer of Wx or so in a certain quadrant of the airport that wasn’t on the METAR and is only seen when the landing lights begin to reflect, or if it happens to be illuminated by the glow of ground lights, depending on how much illumination surrounds the airfield. So long as the field can be kept in sight without and ducking below MDA or and harsh maneuvering, then there’s no reason to react in and major way to it, just drive through and continue. If unable, then one must have the good judgement to go missed.
We just don’t do circle approaches on a day to day basis in our 121 ops, no reason to. I have a feeling your shop does more smaller airports and a lot more opportunities for circling because of approaches available, aircraft capability, and terrain.
Agreed. For what your shop does, the places you go, and your general ops, circling approaches are an exception, not a norm. That’s doesn’t necessarily make them unsafe if you’re faced with one. But it does make for early knowledge of knowing you’re going to have one coming up, and early planning for it. And the risk can be managed, if there’s no other better option. If there is a better, lower risk option that’s easier, you’d obviously take it.