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#1
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Greetings all,
I'm a low-time private pilot in the Tampa Bay area, planning a trip this weekend over to Cape Canaveral (KTIX - Spaceport Regional) to see the shuttle sitting on the pad. I've flown through Tampa Class Bravo before, and learned that approach control sends VFR traffic flying east to west directly over the field at 2,600, while west to east traffic flies the same route at 2,100. (The main runways at Tampa International are 18/36 left and right). My preferred route to Cape Canaveral will take me through Orlando Class Bravo. All of the runways in Orlando are also oriented north/south, so I'm guessing they have a similar procedure. Does anybody have personal experience transitting their airspace west to east (or vice versa)? It would be helpful if I had an idea where they wanted me and when before I actually got there. TIA Jim ------- "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic" - Arthur C Clarke |
#2
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Jim,
First, Sun-n-Fun is this weekend so it'll be a zoo out there with a lot of arrivals and departures to the North. Given that, I'd stay south of LAL and pick up V441 towards MLB. Stay below 3000, and you'll avoid the Orlando Class B completely. When you get 20-30 mi west of MLB (east of Holopaw, where the Class B floor rises to 6000) head directly towards Titusville. Gerry "Ehvee8or" wrote in message ... Greetings all, I'm a low-time private pilot in the Tampa Bay area, planning a trip this weekend over to Cape Canaveral (KTIX - Spaceport Regional) to see the shuttle sitting on the pad. I've flown through Tampa Class Bravo before, and learned that approach control sends VFR traffic flying east to west directly over the field at 2,600, while west to east traffic flies the same route at 2,100. (The main runways at Tampa International are 18/36 left and right). My preferred route to Cape Canaveral will take me through Orlando Class Bravo. All of the runways in Orlando are also oriented north/south, so I'm guessing they have a similar procedure. Does anybody have personal experience transitting their airspace west to east (or vice versa)? It would be helpful if I had an idea where they wanted me and when before I actually got there. TIA Jim ------- "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic" - Arthur C Clarke |
#3
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Gerry Caron wrote:
First, Sun-n-Fun is this weekend so it'll be a zoo out there with a lot of arrivals and departures to the North. Given that, I'd stay south of LAL and pick up V441 towards MLB. Stay below 3000, and you'll avoid the Orlando Class B completely. When you get 20-30 mi west of MLB (east of Holopaw, where the Class B floor rises to 6000) head directly towards Titusville. Staying to the south is an excellent idea. Much of the VFR traffic from the northeast comes past JAX to the WORMS intersection and then makes a beeline for Lakeland. This avoids that MOA mess to the west. You want to keep your head on a swivel in those areas. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
#4
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On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 23:09:37 GMT, "Gerry Caron"
wrote: Jim, First, Sun-n-Fun is this weekend so it'll be a zoo out there with a lot of arrivals and departures to the North. Given that, I'd stay south of LAL and pick up V441 towards MLB. Stay below 3000, and you'll avoid the Orlando Class B completely. When you get 20-30 mi west of MLB (east of Holopaw, where the Class B floor rises to 6000) head directly towards Titusville. Gerry Thanks, Gerry. That's some advice I'm going to heed. The route you suggest adds only 2/10ths to the Hobbs. Cheap insurance, as they say. Jim ------- "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic" - Arthur C Clarke |
#5
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![]() "Ehvee8or" wrote in message ... On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 23:09:37 GMT, "Gerry Caron" wrote: Jim, First, Sun-n-Fun is this weekend so it'll be a zoo out there with a lot of arrivals and departures to the North. Given that, I'd stay south of LAL and pick up V441 towards MLB. Stay below 3000, and you'll avoid the Orlando Class B completely. When you get 20-30 mi west of MLB (east of Holopaw, where the Class B floor rises to 6000) head directly towards Titusville. Gerry Thanks, Gerry. That's some advice I'm going to heed. The route you suggest adds only 2/10ths to the Hobbs. Cheap insurance, as they say. Forget the Hobbs, or one day it will kill you. |
#6
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On 2005-04-12, Chris wrote:
Forget the Hobbs, or one day it will kill you. My plane doesn't even have a Hobbs meter. I didn't realize it was a safety feature. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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