"Nathan Young" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 14:35:35 -0700, "David Brooks"
wrote:
The other day I wanted to fly VFR across RITTS, which is both the LOM for
the ILS, and the origin for the NDB approach, to PAE. I was traveling
east
at right angles to the approach course. I decided to call Center, who
handles approaches in these parts. Although it was clear VFR and I know
he
could see me on his scope, I thought it would be polite to tell him my
intentions and give him a confirmed altitude.
He gave me a bored Roger and asked if I wanted FF.
To the controllers in this group, was that a marginally helpful call to
make, neutral, or annoying? Should I have only bothered if I had heard
another craft setting up an approach?
I am trying to visualize what took place.
You were flying VFR (presumably not talking to ATC), and made a callup
to ATC to let them know you were in the area? What kind of airspace?
What info did your callup include?
Class E, a few miles outside PAE's D. My info was "callsign, VFR, crossing
RITTS eastbound, level 2500. Just giving you a verified altitude".
I know you can expect to find plenty of instrument student/currency flights
crossing RITTS southbound at either 2000 or 3000. I hadn't been listening
long enough to hear if there were any.
-- David Brooks
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