Circling approach, what lurks beyond the circling area?
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You have to remember that a circling approach is a part of an instrument approach where the final part can not be completed without maintaining visual reference with the runway.
No two circling approaches are the same.
Many variables are considered.
Runway layout
Final Approach Track
Wind speed and
Weather conditions
If you perform a circling approach and you do not stick to the obstacle area, you risk descending into an obstacle.
No two circling approaches are the same.
Many variables are considered.
Runway layout
Final Approach Track
Wind speed and
Weather conditions
If you perform a circling approach and you do not stick to the obstacle area, you risk descending into an obstacle.
Thread Starter
Huh… you make an interesting point Scratcher of Butts. If I elect to use a higher minima, using Caf D or Cat E, I’m higher up, need better visibility but my safe area just got a lot larger. So how can that mean using Cat C at 4.2 is safe and Cat D at 5.28 is also safe but a few hundred feet higher?
Hey Mongo,
I agree that circling approaches are just too risky in the real world BUT they are excellent sim training.
A plus is that, one day, you might to do one for real at some crappy ETOPS diversion port. How good would it be to have done one in the sim not too long ago?
I agree that circling approaches are just too risky in the real world BUT they are excellent sim training.
A plus is that, one day, you might to do one for real at some crappy ETOPS diversion port. How good would it be to have done one in the sim not too long ago?
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BUT they are excellent sim training.
Agree whole-heartedly.
Another thing. In marginal visibility such as heavy rain that obscures forward vision or at night, it is good airmanship to stay at or above the circling MDA and don't descend below the circling MDA until you you are aligned within the takeoff splay on final.
Aircraft have crashed into terrain because they have commenced descent on early base leg of the circling approach. Charts do not always show the position of the critical obstacle that determines the MDA.
The moment you start to descend below the published MDA whether early on base leg or early final, you are entirely responsible for your own terrain or obstacle clearance - especially at night where you cannot see the terrain below you. Daytime may be different because you can see the ground and judge your own legal terrain clearance.
Last edited by Centaurus; 30th May 2021 at 12:11.
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Why are you even bothering with circling approaches in this day and age? With straight in approaches published training time can be better utilised elsewhere. The TERPS criteria were/are being progressively changed from 1.7 to 2.7nm from 2013. It's in JEPPS General but the implimentation is not clear...
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Centaurus
There's nothing like early descent/late descent or different in day or night. There is only one position for descent and pilot cannot play with it. If visibility is a problem then it should not be continued. Below from JAR OPS:
A descent below MDA/H should not be initiated until the threshold of the runway to be used has been identified and the aeroplane is in a position to continue with a normal rate of descent and land within the touchdown zone.
There's nothing like early descent/late descent or different in day or night. There is only one position for descent and pilot cannot play with it. If visibility is a problem then it should not be continued. Below from JAR OPS:
A descent below MDA/H should not be initiated until the threshold of the runway to be used has been identified and the aeroplane is in a position to continue with a normal rate of descent and land within the touchdown zone.
A320 Glider
I flew one of our 777s recently and it didn’t have ADF fitted at all, so NDB approaches were off the menu anyway.
RNP approaches are demonstrably safer and usually will have lower minima compared with traditional NPAs = better chance of success. Yes, VOR/NDB are a great skills and CRM exercise in the sim but as they get rarer and rarer on the line, you get to the point where it would be better to stop flying them and use the time available to train something more relevant. The incident/accident statistics on NPAs are not good and it’s getting close to the point we should be calling time on them, now we have a viable (and better) alternative.
I flew one of our 777s recently and it didn’t have ADF fitted at all, so NDB approaches were off the menu anyway.
RNP approaches are demonstrably safer and usually will have lower minima compared with traditional NPAs = better chance of success. Yes, VOR/NDB are a great skills and CRM exercise in the sim but as they get rarer and rarer on the line, you get to the point where it would be better to stop flying them and use the time available to train something more relevant. The incident/accident statistics on NPAs are not good and it’s getting close to the point we should be calling time on them, now we have a viable (and better) alternative.
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mustafagander
I agree somewhat on the "practice" topic, but it is FAR from excellent. I would even call it negative training as doing circling training in a sim created many situations that in real life would demand a go-around, yet we continued because we knew it was related to the simulator visuals that were unusable. Visual procedures in a sim? Nah.
I agree somewhat on the "practice" topic, but it is FAR from excellent. I would even call it negative training as doing circling training in a sim created many situations that in real life would demand a go-around, yet we continued because we knew it was related to the simulator visuals that were unusable. Visual procedures in a sim? Nah.
Yes, that’s a good point. If you a) can’t realistically train circling close to limits in the sim (which I agree with as if you start to use electronic aids and/or prompting from the back as opposed to looking out of the window, the mission has failed) and b) there is very little to no exposure on the line, logically you should be calling the whole thing into question.
We don’t circle in the USA due Ops Spec but can elsewhere, with 1,000’/minima. I used to do quite a bit when flying shorthaul in low-tech aircraft but now with an FMC/iPad full of RNP approaches, I haven’t needed to for a very long time. The guys I fly with are very likely in the same position, so if it was at all marginal, somewhere else with ILS/RNP would be looking much more attractive...
We don’t circle in the USA due Ops Spec but can elsewhere, with 1,000’/minima. I used to do quite a bit when flying shorthaul in low-tech aircraft but now with an FMC/iPad full of RNP approaches, I haven’t needed to for a very long time. The guys I fly with are very likely in the same position, so if it was at all marginal, somewhere else with ILS/RNP would be looking much more attractive...
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In the end it all comes down to risks vs benefits assessments. Is it worth for an operator to legally allow circling approaches when its pilots never have the chance to fly the maneuver in the sim or on the line considering the network structure ?
Some might argue it is better to leave an extra open option considering the fact that nobody would end up flying a circling approach if better options are available... but in that case some form of consistent training is required at least in the sim. It is not acceptable in my opinion to allow such a basic flight maneuver (in the end that's what a circling is - it becomes tricky only on a large transport airplane) with no recurrent training whatsoever.
Some might argue it is better to leave an extra open option considering the fact that nobody would end up flying a circling approach if better options are available... but in that case some form of consistent training is required at least in the sim. It is not acceptable in my opinion to allow such a basic flight maneuver (in the end that's what a circling is - it becomes tricky only on a large transport airplane) with no recurrent training whatsoever.
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BraceBrace
I was in the sim a month ago (A320) with an instructor operating the sim and another in the right seat. I wanted to video the PFD and ND during a circling approach. I prepared a simulated circling dialogue [PF, PM, ATC) to a field our company most likely would circle at. (KBZN) The dialogue consisted of flying the approach, commencing the circle, being required to go missed on short final (due to AC off runway) and flying published missed.
It is true, the visual did not allow for a good visually flown offset nor an appropriate descent to the runway. However setting the box up, flying the maneuver, and most importantly going missed was good training. It was an illuminating experience for the three of us.
Simulator training may not be appropriate but what we’re doing now, which is nothing, is wrong. A circle is treated as a normal maneuver, more normal than an engine failure on takeoff, yet a pilot, at least at our company, may not circle in his or her entire career. The company and ATC want to keep a circle as an option to be used as a last resort to get into an airfield.
Fine, then pilots should demand appropriate, effective, and recurrent circling training.
I was in the sim a month ago (A320) with an instructor operating the sim and another in the right seat. I wanted to video the PFD and ND during a circling approach. I prepared a simulated circling dialogue [PF, PM, ATC) to a field our company most likely would circle at. (KBZN) The dialogue consisted of flying the approach, commencing the circle, being required to go missed on short final (due to AC off runway) and flying published missed.
It is true, the visual did not allow for a good visually flown offset nor an appropriate descent to the runway. However setting the box up, flying the maneuver, and most importantly going missed was good training. It was an illuminating experience for the three of us.
Simulator training may not be appropriate but what we’re doing now, which is nothing, is wrong. A circle is treated as a normal maneuver, more normal than an engine failure on takeoff, yet a pilot, at least at our company, may not circle in his or her entire career. The company and ATC want to keep a circle as an option to be used as a last resort to get into an airfield.
Fine, then pilots should demand appropriate, effective, and recurrent circling training.
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Fine, then pilots should demand appropriate, effective, and recurrent circling training.
Not only that but some operators in OZ require their pilots to have landing flap selected late on the downwind leg where a circuit is being carried out, because the pilots are so apprehensive of being unstable on final that the company SOP now requires them to be stable for landing before turning base with all landing checks complete. Any fuel savings made in the cruise are shot. Vref plus additives downwind means the aircraft is being flown slower than some general aviation aircraft.
One cannot blame the pilots since by regulation they are required to follow company SOP. Presumably there must have been a few QAR reports of last minute unstable approaches from circuits so the chiefs fix that by making it SOP to be stable for landing while on late downwind. A bird strike in an engine at that point (landing flap down in level flight) would require some fancy footwork. Bet that is not practiced in the simulator..
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And I think that to me is the most important question: do we need it? On the network I fly currently on, I don't see the need for circling. From a "threat" perspective I think the idea of "it's a threat" is more safe than training hard and making pilots believe it becomes another standard thing. Because it is not the same safety level, it is pretty old school - based on visual clues. There are other issues to tackle in training. The goal of our job is to fly from A to B in the safest/economical best possible way.
So if operations need it, yes, train, give pilots the opportunity on a regular basis. If operations don't need it... I would avoid the simulator hassle. Because it could be very enlightning yes, but also leading to a lot of avoidable confusion and discussions.
When I was at Ryanair a circling approach was required as part of every LPC/OPC. In some bases, especially in Italy, circling approaches were a regular event and we were very swept up at flying them.
They were generally flown in VMC and ceilings well above circling minima, Though Pisa is the one I recall being most often flown at night and in crappy weather. By contrast my current employer has a minima of 1000’ aal for all circling approaches that overrides whatever is on the plate if lower. Different route networks, different policy development processes and choices.
They were generally flown in VMC and ceilings well above circling minima, Though Pisa is the one I recall being most often flown at night and in crappy weather. By contrast my current employer has a minima of 1000’ aal for all circling approaches that overrides whatever is on the plate if lower. Different route networks, different policy development processes and choices.