BobDDuck
Island Bus Driver
An FO and I were discussing a situation he'd run into last week.
Going into an uncontrolled airport (at night, but that's immaterial), where the weather report was calling for CAVU. 20 miles out, they picked up the AWOS which stated visibility was 1/4 miles. At 10 miles out they had the airport visually and saw the entire runway and terminal complex with no fog or obstructions to visibility. In fact, they saw no fog for miles and miles. For the sake of argument, lets assume that they could not cancel IFR until on the ground per opspecs.
They assumed that they could not land as the reported visibility was too low to start the approach. They held for about 10 minutes until the AWOS was reporting 1 mile and then they landed.
I'm thinking they could have just taken a visual approach and at that point the AWOS reported visibility no longer matters and as long as they maintain visual with the runway they are good to go. Right?
Going into an uncontrolled airport (at night, but that's immaterial), where the weather report was calling for CAVU. 20 miles out, they picked up the AWOS which stated visibility was 1/4 miles. At 10 miles out they had the airport visually and saw the entire runway and terminal complex with no fog or obstructions to visibility. In fact, they saw no fog for miles and miles. For the sake of argument, lets assume that they could not cancel IFR until on the ground per opspecs.
They assumed that they could not land as the reported visibility was too low to start the approach. They held for about 10 minutes until the AWOS was reporting 1 mile and then they landed.
I'm thinking they could have just taken a visual approach and at that point the AWOS reported visibility no longer matters and as long as they maintain visual with the runway they are good to go. Right?