Slabfish wrote:Ban Nav , I have seen airline and com. pilots do the straight-in and announce it nogal, at our reg. runway ,now that to me is a no no.Fullstops.I hope its not the guys without the radios on their microlights doing that ,although they are allowed to fly without,This is another thing I will try and get enforced together with the helmet issue,RADIO COMPULSORY !

.There is only one way to ensure safety in the sky , and that is to fly with a set of rules that apply to EVERY one. The law says join the circuit from the dead side overhead ,and if a pilot does not know why , let him re-write his theory exams , which looks like not a bad idea for some of us

Rules are rules ,there are many examples we can pull out here , like, I'm flying at 7500 ft in my trike because there is a headwind down at 2500 ft and under a restricted airspace, so stuff every body , I make my own rules , like the one where i do a straight-in approach when I reach my airfield. Well ,I`ve got a surprise for you bud ,
"Jy is besig om vir you slegte vlieg gewoontes te kweek en ek hoop ek is nie daar die dag om jou van die grond af op te vee as daai gewoontes met jou gan opvang nie"
It boils down to AIRMANSHIP, or in normal terms common sense.
If you do an straight in approach and land at an unmanned airfield you are looking for k@k, regardless of the type licence you hold and regardless of the price of fuel etc.
On a frequently used tarred airfield, eg. Kitty Hawk, normal joining procedure overhead will probably suffice to observe windsock and other traffic.
On an unfamiliar rarely used bush strip maybe up to three runway inspections until you are happy to land, or divert.
It boils down to common sense. Think about it. If you visit a crapper outside your home, don't you have a careful look before you sit down? In the 5 star hotel in Zürich that may be a very short look, however at the market in Nairobi you will probably have a very careful inspection, an then in all probability divert to another alternate. BUT DEFINATELY NEVER A STRAIGHT IN APPROACH!
Oh, and I nearly forgot, how about if you landed at this crappy bush strip, walking the strip before you take off. You will be surprised to see what you missed doing the runway inspection, and whilst taxi-ing in with all this adrenalin pumping during the landing at this dodgy strip.
Regards, Arnulf