Proficiency isnât just about keeping your instrument currencyâitâs about staying fluent in maneuvers that rarely show up until the day they really matter. Few IFR skills have gathered as much dust as the circling approach.
Why circling approaches still existNot every runway has an aligned instrument procedure. Crosswinds, obstacles, and local terrain sometimes require an approach to one runway and published circling minimums for the others.
Geometry, categories, and protected airspaceAt its core, a circling approach is a visual maneuver flown within a protected radius around the airport. That radius depends on your approach category (AâE) and, per TERPS, increases from about 1.3 NM for a Category A up to around 4.5 NM for a Category E (depending on altitude and conditions).
Flying it smoothlyThe ideal circle is a constant-radius descending turn that keeps the runway environment in sight at all times. Donât âdive and driveâ early, as you could lose visual references below MDA if fragmented clouds abound before you are in a position to land using normal maneuvers.
Get a solid look at the environment and visibility at or above MDA before descent. Keep configuration stable while bearing in mind that shallow, continuous turns give you more visual cues.
When it goes wrongThree big gotchas in circling approaches are as follows:
âIf visual reference is lost while circling-to-land from an instrument approach, the missed approach specified for that particular procedure must be followed (unless an alternate missed approach procedure is specified by ATC).â
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MOSAIC arrived on Wednesday, greatly expanding sport pilot privileges (including for training and medical qualification). Per EAA, with the regulatory focus now primarily on performance characteristics rather than weight limits, sport pilots can access approximately 70% of the current single-engine piston fleet.
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Further reading: 4 reasons circling approaches go wrong |
The whole procedure should be simple. Yet, for some reason, many pilots, regardless of experience, have found themselves in difficult circumstances due to improperly handling the circling procedure. |
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