DVA1528
Captain, B757-200
Joined on February 16 2004
Midwestern United States
43 legs, 103.7 hours
39 legs,
92.1 hours online
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Posted onPost created on
May 14 2004 08:43 ET by Raymond Lancaster
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DVA1427
Senior Captain, MD-11
OLP
Joined on December 14 2003
Online Double Century Club
50 State Club
Tri-Jet Triumph
Globetrotter
Moose Club
US Capital Club
Everett 250 Club
Quincentenary Club
DVA Twenty-Year Anniversary
"Livin' in the Dog Pound!" Kannapolis, NC
558 legs, 1,984.3 hours
250 legs,
611.8 hours online 384 legs,
1,530.5 hours ACARS 38 legs,
82.7 hours event
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Posted onPost created on
May 14 2004 08:55 ET by Lewis Gregory
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My guess is that for the approach you mentioned, they were having the plane use the runway 31 ILS to get within visual range, and then have him fly at least part of a traffic pattern for the landing runway. I actually had FS2004 issue me one of these once, and that's what it had me do--ride the localizer in to about two miles out, then I got the call to fly a left downwind for the actual landing runway.
Lewis GregorySenior Captain, MD-11
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DVA1041
Senior Captain, L-1011-100
E-MAIL
Joined on January 15 2003
Double Century Club
DVA Twenty-Year Anniversary
"Fly Delta Jets!" Cincinnati, OH
233 legs, 780.6 hours
66 legs,
123.7 hours online 20 legs,
39.6 hours ACARS 5 legs,
7.5 hours event
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Posted onPost created on
May 14 2004 10:38 ET by Matt Creed
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That's it in a nutshell, circling approaches are used primarily when an airport has an instrument approach, but not one for the runway that's best suited for the current wind conditions. A couple other things about circling approaches, it's fairly common that on an ILS approach, the circling minimums are higher than if you were shooting a straight in ILS approach. Also, once you break out and begin to circle, if you lose sight of the field, you have to fly the missed approach procedure by making a climbing turn towards the landing runway, and continuing the turn until established on the published missed approach course.
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