From another Facebook group, but here’s the “Circling NA” note you speak of:
View attachment 62558
I just wanted to share for emphasis because FAA / Flightcheck / etc was smart enough to say “Gee maybe we shouldn’t let people turn at low altitude in inclement weather towards the 1000 ft mountain that’s half a mile from the end of the runway.”
I also want to re-emphasize that I don’t think what they did was a by the book circling approach, because 750 ft MSL there is
362 ft AGL at 130 knots, and they cancelled IFR to do it. I would call that a “carrier break” at that point, and even those are flown at 600 ft AGL over water. I’ve seen the exact accident aircraft from the ground doing interesting “aggressive” looking circling over the last few days and laughed about it (it genuinely looked like fun in VMC at pattern altitude), so I share your concern that fatigue/spatial disorientation helped inadvertently take their regular procedure down closer to the deck.
I’ve done a decent bit of flying at Gillespie and it’s my new home airport. I genuinely really enjoy it, the tower is awesome to work with, the runway configuration is interesting and the 1000 ft mountain (Rattlesnake Mountain) you either have to turn base behind or in front of for a very very short approach is a hoot. But I don’t think local San Diego pilots give Gillespie enough credit for how dangerous it is, as it is literally situated in a bowl surrounded on all sides by rising terrain and in a heavily populated area. (Edit: I think it should stay open and I love it, we just need to treat it with the respect it deserves and not get complacent.)
I completely agree that the tailwind for runway 9L was probably too high, and suspected that 17/35 was a little short for a Lear. I certainly get the “get-there-itis” argument where the company is probably pressuring you to put the jet back in their own hangar for the night, but good grief you’ve got Montgomery and the ILS 28R 5 minutes away. SAN, SDM, RNM or CRQ are all reasonable alternatives as well and we are lucky there’s no shortage of IFR airports in this little area.