Lee D
Well-Known Member
I work at a small uncontrolled airport in Cody, WY and I really dont think the alot of the Skywest pilots knows how to fly in to uncontrolled airports. Watched one the other day land long with a 15 knot tailwind, I wouldve swore he was going off the runway, but he used every last inch. Skywest pilots are the first to go missed and its quite frequent that I watch them break out of the clouds 5 miles before the airport but they go missed every time. Just the other day Skywest went missed twice then diverted because of the smoke and probably a dozen other corporate planes landed who all told me they didnt even come close to minimums and were astounded Skywest would divert in such good weather. I was just wondering if theres a reason for this? Or they just not used to a VOR circle to land approach? MESA never seems to have a problem. And why in the world dont Skywest have the capability to use the GPS straight in approach with the lower minimums? even my 172 can do that. Anyways just wondering, I have only flown Corporate 91 and dont have any 121 experiance.
The CRJ, at least at SkyWest is not certified for the circle to land. In the Brasilia we do it. Currently the RJ lands at Cody, though I have landed the Brasilia there many times. I think I can speak for most of us when I say that the circle to land, especially at night to runway 4 is a real nail biter. (Large mountain if you fly downwind too long, then rising/dropping terrain on final. In other words don't fly to long on downwind and don't be low on final for the circle to land. . . .or you WILL hit something.) Personally I found that turning just before you over fly Wal-Mart worked perfectly for cat C circles.

The Brasilia can do the VOR approach or GPS approaches. From what FLYGUY mentioned above it looks like the RJ doesnt do GPS approaches yet. Personally I think Cody WY is more appropriate for turboprop flying than RJ's. Not sure why they switched it earlier this summer. (Yeah I need a little cheese with that whine.)
Reading between the lines here I take it you think SkyWest pilots are a bunch of fraidy cats.

I can't tell you why anyone would deliberately land with a 15 knot tail wind. (10 knots is the limit.) Though in the number of years I landed at Cody I found that the winds were usually gusty, with decent mechanical turbulence and wind shear from the hills and mountains that surround the field. (I bet 75% of my flights into Cody involved moderate turbulence followed by a gusty wind landing.) Most likely he got the winds from the AWOS 10 minutes before landing and things then changed.
With regard to go arounds, all I can say is that if you don't have the field by the VDP you go around. Why the corporate operators got in that day and we didn't. . . . who knows? NONE of us want the hassle of a go around and subsequent diversion. They are not going to divert unless they have to. Likely if the winds are favoring runway 4 and they have to use the circle mins then they have to go missed much earlier. If the corporate outfits can circle and do the GPS approaches, they have a much better advantage.
Smoke is a funny thing too. The other day going into Sun Valley while a large fire burned about 20 miles away, we had 30 miles of visibility 10 minutes out. 5 minutes out it went to 10 miles vis, and we could still see the field. Then it disappeared in the smoke within less than a minute. We had to go back cancel our visual approach, go back to the initial for the GPS and then shoot the approach down to the wire before we saw the field. My point is that smoke and weather are dynamic; they can change rather quickly. Your mileage may vary greatly from the guy who landed or tired to land before you.
BTW I wasn't in San Antonio.
