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Hypothetically speaking, what happens if a student wanders off course and
clips the inside of a class B ring. I've heard stories of the FAA waiting for violators at the airport. If these stories are true, how does ATC figure out who the pilot/aircraft is and which airport to find them? What if you were squawking 1200 and landed at a non-towered airport? How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? Dallas |
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If it is a serious enough violation.. they will track the aircraft by radar
as far as possible, and many times they will call ahead and have some authority type waiting, or calling into to the Class D Tower. But you said uncontrolled field. If it is a mere clipping and he was not "eyeballed" by another aircraft for a description and n-number, by landing at a non-towered it field may be difficult to prove. Of course, a lot of Class B airspace may have local police air units on frequency, and if the air unit is free, and the violation serious enough, they may ask the air unit to intercept to at least gather an n-number or steer the violator away from the dense airspace. BT "Dallas" wrote in message hlink.net... Hypothetically speaking, what happens if a student wanders off course and clips the inside of a class B ring. I've heard stories of the FAA waiting for violators at the airport. If these stories are true, how does ATC figure out who the pilot/aircraft is and which airport to find them? What if you were squawking 1200 and landed at a non-towered airport? How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? Dallas |
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On Jan 31, 4:33 pm, "Dallas" wrote:
Hypothetically speaking, what happens if a student wanders off course and clips the inside of a class B ring. I've heard stories of the FAA waiting for violators at the airport. If these stories are true, how does ATC figure out who the pilot/aircraft is and which airport to find them? What if you were squawking 1200 and landed at a non-towered airport? How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? A friend of mine got a 30 day suspension and a bad record for 5 years on his solo cross country. Personally, I require my students to use flight following in case they get into the class C by mistake. -Robert |
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On Wed, 31 Jan 2007 16:33:45 -0800, Dallas wrote
(in article k.net): Hypothetically speaking, what happens if a student wanders off course and clips the inside of a class B ring. I've heard stories of the FAA waiting for violators at the airport. Nothing, to the student. His instructor is another matter. If the FAA finds that the instructor was negligent in teaching his student, then they may take any action from warning him to taking away his certificates. If these stories are true, how does ATC figure out who the pilot/aircraft is and which airport to find them? What if you were squawking 1200 and landed at a non-towered airport? They can't, usually. They might call someone at the non-towered airport and watch for people landing there if it looks like you are headed that way. How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? Usually nothing, unless you forced an airliner to take evasive action. Then there will be an investigation and heads could roll. I have known a few pilots who have inadvertently clipped class B. The FAA tends to be more severe with people who should know better. Sometimes they are required to fly with an instructor and get retraining. If it causes an accident, you could easily lose all your certificates and you will be sued by just about everyone. You will go bankrupt. Your instructor will deny having ever met you. Homeland Security will brand you a terrorist. You will lose your home, your family and they might even shoot your dog. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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Dallas wrote:
How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? As far as barely clipping airspace, I know folks who have _just_ by a hair clipped BOS & NY, and were not pursued. Personally, I contact them well clear of the space and ask for clearance if I'm anywhere near the edge, as I really don't want to poke at the beast. What's probably worse is popping up through the floor, or suddenly showing up some other way. I am personally familiar with someone who was cut loose from a VFR flight following and told to squawk VFR by NYC Bravo controllers, while INSIDE Newark's inner-ring airspace, on approach to Linden, NJ. Newark Tower called Linden and they had Newark on the phone when he walked into the FBO. Lucky for him, the conversation started off like this: Caller: "Did those MF'er's (ref: NY Bravo control) do what we think they did?" Pilot: "Yes" Caller" (in background) "Get those a--holes on the phone!" (back to phone) "If that _ever_ happens again, fly directly over the center of the field and contact the tower" Apparently, an airliner had to go around due to his Piper Arrow zipping right through the space as a 1200. The pilot filed a NASA form. |
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On Thu, 1 Feb 2007 05:15:36 -0800, B A R R Y wrote
(in article ): Dallas wrote: How serious is this infraction and what generally happens to the hapless pilot? As far as barely clipping airspace, I know folks who have _just_ by a hair clipped BOS & NY, and were not pursued. Personally, I contact them well clear of the space and ask for clearance if I'm anywhere near the edge, as I really don't want to poke at the beast. What's probably worse is popping up through the floor, or suddenly showing up some other way. I am personally familiar with someone who was cut loose from a VFR flight following and told to squawk VFR by NYC Bravo controllers, while INSIDE Newark's inner-ring airspace, on approach to Linden, NJ. Newark Tower called Linden and they had Newark on the phone when he walked into the FBO. Lucky for him, the conversation started off like this: Caller: "Did those MF'er's (ref: NY Bravo control) do what we think they did?" Pilot: "Yes" Caller" (in background) "Get those a--holes on the phone!" (back to phone) "If that _ever_ happens again, fly directly over the center of the field and contact the tower" Apparently, an airliner had to go around due to his Piper Arrow zipping right through the space as a 1200. The pilot filed a NASA form. This is a great example of why you don't blindly follow ATC instructions. I think the proper response would have been, "Say again? We are still inside the Bravo." -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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On Jan 31, 9:57 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
On Jan 31, 4:33 pm, "Dallas" wrote: A friend of mine got a 30 day suspension and a bad record for 5 years on his solo cross country. Personally, I require my students to use flight following in case they get into the class C by mistake. -Robert Robert, A 30 day suspension for what?Did he contest this in court?What happened to his instructor? How does using flight following absolve you from guilt when you violate a reg? KM |
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"alice" wrote in message
oups.com... On Jan 31, 9:57 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: Personally, I require my students to use flight following in case they get into the class C by mistake. How does using flight following absolve you from guilt when you violate a reg? When using flight following, you've met the requirement to enter class C (2 way comminucations) |
#9
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C J Campbell wrote:
This is a great example of why you don't blindly follow ATC instructions. I think the proper response would have been, "Say again? We are still inside the Bravo." While flying from HOU to AXH, I've had the tower quite a few times turn me loose and tell me to squawk 1200 a few miles before being clear of the Class-B... I guess they figure that on a flight on a straight out radial from the airport, it's not like I'm going to make any abrupt course changes in the next minute or so... On the other hand, I've had controllers keep me until I was well out of the Class-B and I had to remind them to let me go... |
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On Thu, 1 Feb 2007 08:47:01 -0800, Grumman-581 wrote
(in article ): C J Campbell wrote: This is a great example of why you don't blindly follow ATC instructions. I think the proper response would have been, "Say again? We are still inside the Bravo." While flying from HOU to AXH, I've had the tower quite a few times turn me loose and tell me to squawk 1200 a few miles before being clear of the Class-B... I guess they figure that on a flight on a straight out radial from the airport, it's not like I'm going to make any abrupt course changes in the next minute or so... On the other hand, I've had controllers keep me until I was well out of the Class-B and I had to remind them to let me go... Yeah, we get that sort of thing in Seattle, too. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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