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C J Campbell
September 16th 04, 04:12 PM
I took a student up yesterday to practice holding on the localizer in IMC
conditions. Winds were gusting to over 20 knots and of course it was bumpy
in there. He struggled with it for about 45 minutes (boy, does that bring
back memories), but he learned a lot about holding, localizers, outer
markers, the leans, and ATC. I call that a good flight.

We asked for the ILS back into Tacoma Narrows and were cleared, but we were
not handed off at the outer marker as usual. This happens fairly often when
radio traffic is heavy and so we gave tower a call anyway, reporting SCENN.
They sounded a little hesitant but cleared us to land. A minute or so later
they called us up and asked us to contact Seattle Approach and report that
their telephones were not working (we later learned that telephones were out
in the general area for a short time). Approach said they had figured that
out and that is why they weren't able to hand us off. They sent us back to
the tower with the message that they were aware of the problem. We broke out
at about 1000 feet (the ceiling right over the airport was 1500 feet, but
there were lower clouds to the north).

I thought the incident was interesting in that it offered a slightly unusual
problem to solve.

--
Christopher J. Campbell
World Famous Flight Instructor
Port Orchard, WA


If you go around beating the Bush, don't complain if you rile the animals.

John R. Copeland
September 16th 04, 08:32 PM
"C J Campbell" > wrote in message =
...
>I took a student up yesterday to practice holding on the localizer in =
IMC
> conditions. Winds were gusting to over 20 knots and of course it was =
bumpy
> in there. He struggled with it for about 45 minutes (boy, does that =
bring
> back memories), but he learned a lot about holding, localizers, outer
> markers, the leans, and ATC. I call that a good flight.
>=20
> We asked for the ILS back into Tacoma Narrows and were cleared, but we =
were
> not handed off at the outer marker as usual. This happens fairly often =
when
> radio traffic is heavy and so we gave tower a call anyway, reporting =
SCENN.
> They sounded a little hesitant but cleared us to land. A minute or so =
later
> they called us up and asked us to contact Seattle Approach and report =
that
> their telephones were not working (we later learned that telephones =
were out
> in the general area for a short time). Approach said they had figured =
that
> out and that is why they weren't able to hand us off. They sent us =
back to
> the tower with the message that they were aware of the problem. We =
broke out
> at about 1000 feet (the ceiling right over the airport was 1500 feet, =
but
> there were lower clouds to the north).
>=20
> I thought the incident was interesting in that it offered a slightly =
unusual
> problem to solve.
>=20
> Christopher J. Campbell
>
I'm trying to imagine if that could be some ripple effect from Tuesday's =
outage
of radios at Palmdale. But I'm not having any success at that so far.
---JRC---

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