Possession of an instrument rating opens the
door to airports when the weather is below basic VFR, provided the aircraft is
properly equipped and that someone has a copy of the appropriate instrument
approach plate — either electronic or paper — for guidance. Anywhere and in any
weather… almost.
There are roughly 40 U.S. airports that demand
more than simply an instrument rating and a chart to use them, and the FAA
wants pilots to be sure they understand what makes these places special,
offering details in the recently published InFo for Operators, 17015. Essentially, these
Special Instrument Procedures demand specific crew training and often special
equipment on board the airplane.
While these special
procedures might look similar to a standard approach plate and may be included
in an electronic database aboard many aircraft, “Flightcrews must not request
nor accept an Air Traffic Control (ATC) clearance for a Special Instrument
Procedure without specific FAA-Flight Standards authorization.” The agency
implied instances in which ATC may have offered one of these procedures in
error. “These actions introduce a potential adverse safety impact as operators
may not have special training and required equipage to safely operate utilizing
Special Instrument Procedures.”
Familiar approaches that
require special certification are in use at Aspen or Rifle Colorado, Saranac
Lake New York, Lebanon Regional New Hampshire and others that can be
found on the FAA website.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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