Per the FARs and other FAA guidance, no, you cannot log a visual approach as non-precision. For an approach to be loggable, it must be conducted with sole reference to instruments. If in actual IMC, the pilot must transition from IMC to VMC at some point on the final approach segment (between glideslope intercept/FAF and mins). If in simulated IMC, the pilot must remain simulated IMC until mins unless forced to deviate for traffic or similar.Do you have a reference for that? I don't think that would fly on the FAR side because you'd be VMC past the FAF. On the Navy side, I thought you had to be some level of IMC at some point within the IAP (but those penguins are quickly departing the pattern).
I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm honestly curious if it's spelled out somewhere that I'm (undoubtedly) forgetting.
3710's list of non-precision approaches is not exhaustive, but it lists neither visual nor contact approaches. Interestingly, it does list self-contained approaches, so with a bit of sea lawyering, one could argue use of the V-22's hover page and RVL Symbology is loggable. Same with the actual SCA capability on the fancier C-130s and probably the spooky AFSOC turboprops.
Obviously at your own risk with "fly what you want, log what you need."