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#1
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All -
Just wanted to post my experiences from a tour that I took today of the Potomac TRACON in Warrenton, VA. First off, I got my instrument rating back in January, and today was the first time I flew a ton of hard IFR. It was a 2.3 hour trip from KABE to KHEF. I went IMC at 1000' MSL and broke out in Manassas at 700' MSL - what a rush. Anyway, I went down for an ADIZ seminar and tour of the TRACON. What a facility! Kudos to all the controllers that came in on their day off to give tours and explain the things they do to keep us safe. It was enlightening. I think one of the best questions that was asked was their biggest pet peeves... most of them were regarding VFR pilots: - Not being brief (giving your life history when calling in) - Not executing turns in a timely fashion. - Thinking that you switched frequencies, and you didn't, and in turn giving your life history again! All in all, it was a good trip (a) I got lots of good practice in the soup and (b) I have a better understanding of what ATC does, why they do it, and how to make their lives easier. And for those of you that live or fly in/around the Washington DC area and must deal with the ADIZ... ATC hates it just as much as we do. I spoke to the gentleman that coordinates these tours, and he mentioned that they plan on doing it once a quarter until the attendance dies down. There were two seminars today, and I bet the one that I attended had about 75 people there. The personalized tours consisted of a controller working with about 5 attendees. If you get the chance, by all means, do it - its worth it. I found out about it through the AOPA email newletter that comes out. The thing fills up fast, so be quick. If you don't get in, you'll get on a waiting list and if you still get cut, you'll have first crack at the next one. Regards, Charlie Derk |
#2
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Have you noticed anything about being a US Citizen on the requirements
to visit the tracon? In the last tour that they arranged here in Seattle that was a requirement and upset a lot of H1Bs and permanent residents. All my visits to Dulles Approach, Dulles Tower and Washington Center were a lot of fun when I used to live there. Baha Acuner |
#3
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![]() Baha wrote: Have you noticed anything about being a US Citizen on the requirements to visit the tracon? It's not a requirement. If you are not a US citizen you have to be checked out in advance of your tour. |
#4
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![]() Newps wrote: Baha wrote: Have you noticed anything about being a US Citizen on the requirements to visit the tracon? It's not a requirement. If you are not a US citizen you have to be checked out in advance of your tour. Could you refer me to the rule/law/FAA material that says that? Here in Seattle FSDO the thing was verbotten to the non-citizens. Period. My emails, phone calls, etc. was turned down. If I can find something about the way Potomac Tracon is handling this, it will enable us to visit the Seattle Approach facilities. Thanks, Baha Acuner |
#5
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![]() Baha wrote: Newps wrote: Baha wrote: Have you noticed anything about being a US Citizen on the requirements to visit the tracon? It's not a requirement. If you are not a US citizen you have to be checked out in advance of your tour. Could you refer me to the rule/law/FAA material that says that? No. It's a memo that I presume all facilities gave to their controllers. It says that anybody that isn't a citizen that wants a tour is to be referred to the office. The manager will contact the FBI and a quick background check will be done and then you get your tour. |
#6
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And they wonder why students and low-timers
are intimidated to call into these guys! Well, it's great to know! They've got a busy airspace to care for. Thanks for the report! |
#7
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Here at TRI they would not let a CFI from Brazil that works for my flight
school go on the tour of the ATC facility. Guess they are getting pretty strict on it. Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech |
#8
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Good for you taking the tour Charlie. I had a chance to visit our local
TRACON (Norcal) a few months back and it was awesome. As it turned out, I'm now partners with two guys that work in the facility so I'll be able to go back sometime. It's a great experience to see things from the controller's side of things. If anyone ever gets an opportunity for something like this, by all means, do it. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Arrow N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#9
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I second that Jack. I took a tour (part of Operation Raincheck?) here
at the STL TRACON. Excellent experience. One thing I found interesting, was most of the group that was there for the tour was VFR pilots, and didn't seem interested in instrument procedures, etc. Mostly questions about VFR flight following, etc. Still it was nice to look at the scopes and watch the traffic come in. It's pretty light traffic these days in STL with the loss of hub status by American, but it was still interesting. They echo'd similar pet peeves. Getting a pilot's life story on initial contact. Seems there's a certain flight school (affiliated with a college) who's instructors are teaching their students that way. Jack, Charlie were your tours part of an official program like Operation Raincheck? Or just an ad hoc tour? I'd like to do another one again, seems I had a bunch more questions after I left than before I was there. Oh and I'd kill for more time on their simulator (only had about 5 minutes due to a scheduling foulup). Brian |
#10
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 In rec.aviation.piloting Jack Allison wrote: Good for you taking the tour Charlie. I had a chance to visit our local TRACON (Norcal) a few months back and it was awesome. As it turned out, I'm now partners with two guys that work in the facility so I'll be able to go back sometime. It's a great experience to see things from the controller's side of things. If anyone ever gets an opportunity for something like this, by all means, do it. What steps did you take for getting the visit? I tried for a group of us, and was turned down. 4 in my group were CFIs, and one a controller in the LFPG FIR in France. Did you just call and arrange for a tour? Did you mention Operation Raincheck? What was it you did to get in? BL. - -- Brad Littlejohn | Email: Unix Systems Administrator, | Web + NewsMaster, BOFH.. Smeghead! ![]() PGP: 1024D/E319F0BF 6980 AAD6 7329 E9E6 D569 F620 C819 199A E319 F0BF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFCdqnDyBkZmuMZ8L8RAo98AJ9aaVimkTTPgvLbAPE1+7 yKIC3awwCfQyUA GW0wlYqxmBRsEh/T0Eb89mg= =41IY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
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