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According to "Fly With Blake",
http://fly.blakecrosby.com/2007/03/t...ges_expla.html the YYZ "Class C Mode C" airspace stretches out to 26nm, and now they are going to make the ring from 26nm out to 65nm from 6,500MSL to 12,500MSL "Class E Mode C", meaning you don't need a clearance, but you need to be squawking mode C. Does this seem slightly ridiculous to you? I can get to within 30nm of airports like JFK and LAX without a Mode C, and I bet they handle more traffic on a slow Sunday than YYZ handles all week. Where is the need for this air space grab? Do Canadian pilots get as upset about needless airspace grabs as American ones? Or are they resigned to this being the best that they can get? -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ We are not gentle tolerant people. We like drastically effective solutions. -- Steve VanDevender |
#2
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On Mar 11, 3:40 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
According to "Fly With Blake",http://fly.blakecrosby.com/2007/03/t...ges_expla.html the YYZ "Class C Mode C" airspace stretches out to 26nm, and now they are going to make the ring from 26nm out to 65nm from 6,500MSL to 12,500MSL "Class E Mode C", meaning you don't need a clearance, but you need to be squawking mode C. Does this seem slightly ridiculous to you? I can get to within 30nm of airports like JFK and LAX without a Mode C, and I bet they handle more traffic on a slow Sunday than YYZ handles all week. Where is the need for this air space grab? Do Canadian pilots get as upset about needless airspace grabs as American ones? Or are they resigned to this being the best that they can get? According to the full text, COPA has been involved with this one. I only get upset when Canadian airspace is restricted south and east of Detroit when Air Force One lands at DTW and the Selfridge F-16s are blasting around "south" of the border. ![]() |
#3
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![]() (Paul Tomblin) writes: According to "Fly With Blake", http://fly.blakecrosby.com/2007/03/t...ges_expla.html the YYZ "Class C Mode C" airspace stretches out to 26nm, and now they are going to make the ring from 26nm out to 65nm from 6,500MSL to 12,500MSL "Class E Mode C", meaning you don't need a clearance, but you need to be squawking mode C. [...] Where is the need for this air space grab? One may give the benefit of doubt to ATC and accept that it would probably help keep airplanes separated. The effect is probably to permit controllers to vector jets while mostly ignoring primary-only radar returns, permitting ATC presume that the latter are below the new ring. In this day and age, how much trouble do you believe it is to get a working mode-C transponder in the plane if one wants to cruise 6500 ft up -- i.e., how many people would be inconvenienced by this "grab"? (Note that gliders at a nearby field are excepted.) - FChE |
#5
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Paul Tomblin opined
According to "Fly With Blake", http://fly.blakecrosby.com/2007/03/t...ges_expla.html the YYZ "Class C Mode C" airspace stretches out to 26nm, and now they are going to make the ring from 26nm out to 65nm from 6,500MSL to 12,500MSL "Class E Mode C", meaning you don't need a clearance, but you need to be squawking mode C. Does this seem slightly ridiculous to you? I can get to within 30nm of airports like JFK and LAX without a Mode C, and I bet they handle more traffic on a slow Sunday than YYZ handles all week. Where is the need for this air space grab? Do Canadian pilots get as upset about needless airspace grabs as American ones? Or are they resigned to this being the best that they can get? Without mode C, how will they know if someone is in the "Class E Mode C" or just cruising along at 5,500'? Did the FAAsneak across the border? -ash Cthulhu in 2007! Why wait for nature? |
#6
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On Mar 12, 7:54 am, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
As COPA says, there is no need for a jet to be below 12,500 when it's 65nm out unless it's crashing. errr..believe they said 7000 (6500 + 500). |
#7
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![]() Paul Tomblin wrote: In this day and age, how much trouble would it be to keep jets up high until they're close in? Every Class B in the US manages somehow. And class C and D also. And those controllers are inefficient government employees and union members, not lean and mean private company employees like NavCanada. We're not all union members. Probably only about 65% of the controllers are in the union |
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