When I first read about this, I think I read that visibility was at four miles, and as stated at night. Given that it was THIS airplane, and the cargo that it was carrying, I would figure that SOP for all landings in anything other than day time and clear blue skies would be on instruments. A friend of mine was working on his pilots license and was flying his first cross country and return flight that originated here in St. Louis, cross country to Quincy, Illinois, touch and go and return. Quincy has a tower, but is a small airport, and I don't think there is any scheduled flights in or out. My buddy says he radioed ahead for a visual approach for a touch and go, and was cleared for a specific runway. He said he got sight of the field, made his approach, and touched down. As he was rolling along on the ground, he looked to hid right and saw a row of F-16 fighters. A million things raced through his mind in a few seconds, and he figured that he wasn't in Quincy, Illinois! As he put the power back up and took off, he realized he was in Springfield, Illinois! He made his turn and headed back to the airport he took off from, and the whole way back he was getting his story straight in his head. When he landed, he said that an FAA guy was waiting for him and questioned him about the flight. He said he just flew cross country to Quincy, did a touch and go, and flew back, all with as good a poker face as he could put on. The FAA guy just stared at him and said, "You gonna stick to that story.?" and he said "Yeah, what's the problem?" He got a little lecture from the FAA guy, who probably let him off thinking he was just nervous on his first solo cross country, and he was correct! I guess the moral of the story is, when in doubt, just deny everything!
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee