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DA/MDA & Visual References

The decision point on every approach: at minima, can you continue or do you go missed? DA/DH on precision approaches is a decision point (momentary descent below allowed during missed). MDA on non-precision approaches is a hard floor (no descent below without visuals + visibility). 14 CFR § 91.175 lists the specific visual references that authorize continuing below minima — memorize them. Plus the rules for sidestep, circling, contact, and visual approaches.

side-view diagram comparing DA (decision altitude, no hard floor) vs MDA (hard floor) profiles
Source: Personal study notes (RemNote)

DA/DH vs MDA

Required visual references — § 91.175

The approach may continue below DA/MDA only when:

  1. The aircraft is continuously in a position from which a safe landing using normal maneuvers is possible.
  2. Flight visibility is at or above the minimum prescribed in the IAP.
  3. One of the following visual references is distinctly visible and identifiable:
    • Approach light system (additional limits if only ALS is in sight — descent only to 100 ft above TDZE unless red terminating bars or red side row bars are in sight)
    • Threshold, threshold markings, or threshold lights
    • Runway end identifier lights (REIL)
    • Visual approach slope indicator (VASI / PAPI)
    • Touchdown zone, touchdown markings, or touchdown zone lights
    • Runway, runway markings, or runway lights
  4. Or, if the aircraft has reached the published VDP for a non-precision approach.

If the visual references are lost (except during normal banked turns when maneuvering), execute the missed approach immediately.

Sidestep maneuver

Fly an approach to one runway then land on a parallel runway within 1,200 ft laterally. Only allowed when the sidestep was part of the original approach clearance (e.g., "cleared ILS 16R, sidestep 16L"). Initiate as soon as the landing runway environment is in view.

Used at airports with closely-spaced parallel runways where the ILS is on one and traffic flow demands the other.

Circle-to-land

When the final approach is misaligned with the desired landing runway by > 30° (or > 15° for GPS), or when descent gradient from FAF exceeds 400 ft/NM. Indicated on charts by suffix letter A, B, C (no numeric runway suffix — "VOR A" instead of "VOR 16").

Contact & visual approaches

If you ask for a contact approach, be confident you can make it in. There's no published guidance — it's pilot navigation in marginal VMC.

Established on final & CDI sensitivity

Established means: stable on the navigational data with no more than half-scale CDI deflection for an ILS or VOR (5° for an NDB). 14 CFR 91.181 requires you to fly the centerline of an ATS route — and an approach segment qualifies.

CDI accuracy: 5 dots either side of center; each dot represents of course deviation. Linear deviation from a VOR depends on distance:

A VOR funnels you in: the same dot deflection covers less ground as you approach the station. Fly with a tighter tolerance the closer you get.