A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Piloting
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old November 4th 07, 03:25 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Tman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 68
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

Appreciate this groups insight ...

When getting VFR advisories into an uncontrolled field, when and how ought
one transition to the CTAF. Currently, I tune in and monitor the CTAF on
COM2, and if ATC doesn't tell me "squawk VFR, freq change approved" by about
5 miles out, i get antsy and cancel advisories. The theory is that I really
want to be focused on other traffic on the CTAF, and the advisories aren't
always that helpful "numerous targets in the pattern...". Also, there is
sometimes a lot of chatter on the ATC frequency, making it easy to miss a
CTAF transmission even when monitoring it. Should I just cancel advisories
proactively 10 miles or so out so that Ican focus totally on the CTAF? Or
should i really let ATC take the first step, with the assumption that they
know best their abilitiy to provide quality advisories, and they'll drop me
over to the CTAF at the most optimal time. I'd be interested in the
different opinions on this... What if i only had one COMM (like the C152 I
on occassion fly).

Second question. Check out http://skyvector.com/#29-15-3-2383-2408, i was
flying into MGJ (Orange County) at 6500 from the E, getting advisories from
NY Approach. Actually the flight from the Ebrought me right over the SWF
(Stewart) Class D airspace, which has a 3000 ceiling. So I was in my VFR
descent actually right over Stewart, being careful and then some not to bust
the 3000 ceiling until i was well clear of the Class D, which gave me all of
2 miles to get from about 3500 to the 1400 TPA at Orange County. Rwy 3 was
active at Orange County, so i overflew the field, went about 1-2 miles to
the West, descended aggressively and entered the left downind on a 45, still
descending 1200 FPM right up to the downwind turn. Somewhere right over the
field, NY cancelled and i turned over to the CTAF.

OK, on reflection this did not strike me as the safest way to do things.
For one, the aggressive descent just outside of the downwind, in a field
that has a fair amount of turbine traffic flying (wider and higher) patterns
right where i was descending through. For another, i would have rather been
at TPA a fair bit out, so that i could have the benefit of monitoring the
pattern at eye level. Ideas on how to do this better? Some thoughts that
come to mind a

* Be more patient, go to the west even more, say 4-5 miles, give it time for
a gentler descent, and enter on the 45 at the TPA.
* Be more patient, and navigate to the N or S to avoid Stewart's Class D
altogether.
* Could I ask NY approach to talk to Stewart tower and see if i can get
permission to descend through Stewart's Class D. Might they do it and would
that be legal anyways -- or would i have to talk directly to Stewart tower?
* Or would i just ask to cancel flight following in the vicinity of Stewart,
talk to their tower, tell them the deal and ask to descend through their
Class D enroute to MGJ?

There's large turbine traffic low all over the place here...

Any other ideas?

Thanks all! Tman...


  #2  
Old November 4th 07, 03:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
B A R R Y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 517
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

On Sun, 4 Nov 2007 10:25:38 -0500, "Tman" N/A wrote:

Should I just cancel advisories
proactively 10 miles or so out so that Ican focus totally on the CTAF?


That's what I usually do. Many good controllers will alert you to
targets in your destination's environment, if they can seen them, as
you end advisories.


Second question. Check out http://skyvector.com/#29-15-3-2383-2408, i was
flying into MGJ (Orange County) at 6500 from the E, getting advisories from
NY Approach. Actually the flight from the Ebrought me right over the SWF
(Stewart) Class D airspace, which has a 3000 ceiling. So I was in my VFR
descent actually right over Stewart, being careful and then some not to bust
the 3000 ceiling until i was well clear of the Class D, which gave me all of
2 miles to get from about 3500 to the 1400 TPA at Orange County. Rwy 3 was
active at Orange County, so i overflew the field, went about 1-2 miles to
the West, descended aggressively and entered the left downind on a 45, still
descending 1200 FPM right up to the downwind turn. Somewhere right over the
field, NY cancelled and i turned over to the CTAF.

Ideas on how to do this better? Some thoughts that
come to mind a


I've flown VFR into MGJ from the same direction.

I simply stayed a tick north of Stewart so I could descend earlier and
arrive at the traffic pattern entry point at pattern altitude without
extra maneuvering.
  #3  
Old November 4th 07, 04:25 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,892
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

Tman N/A wrote:
Appreciate this groups insight ...


When getting VFR advisories into an uncontrolled field, when and how ought
one transition to the CTAF. Currently, I tune in and monitor the CTAF on
COM2, and if ATC doesn't tell me "squawk VFR, freq change approved" by about
5 miles out, i get antsy and cancel advisories. The theory is that I really
want to be focused on other traffic on the CTAF, and the advisories aren't
always that helpful "numerous targets in the pattern...". Also, there is
sometimes a lot of chatter on the ATC frequency, making it easy to miss a
CTAF transmission even when monitoring it. Should I just cancel advisories
proactively 10 miles or so out so that Ican focus totally on the CTAF? Or
should i really let ATC take the first step, with the assumption that they
know best their abilitiy to provide quality advisories, and they'll drop me
over to the CTAF at the most optimal time. I'd be interested in the
different opinions on this... What if i only had one COMM (like the C152 I
on occassion fly).


Around here the procedure it to advise ATC that you have the airport in
sight at the point where you wish to terminate flight following.

I would question the value of any CTAF chatter from farther than 5 miles
out in this situation unless you have a really fast airplane.

Second question. Check out http://skyvector.com/#29-15-3-2383-2408, i was
flying into MGJ (Orange County) at 6500 from the E, getting advisories from
NY Approach. Actually the flight from the Ebrought me right over the SWF
(Stewart) Class D airspace, which has a 3000 ceiling. So I was in my VFR
descent actually right over Stewart, being careful and then some not to bust
the 3000 ceiling until i was well clear of the Class D, which gave me all of
2 miles to get from about 3500 to the 1400 TPA at Orange County. Rwy 3 was
active at Orange County, so i overflew the field, went about 1-2 miles to
the West, descended aggressively and entered the left downind on a 45, still
descending 1200 FPM right up to the downwind turn. Somewhere right over the
field, NY cancelled and i turned over to the CTAF.

OK, on reflection this did not strike me as the safest way to do things.
For one, the aggressive descent just outside of the downwind, in a field
that has a fair amount of turbine traffic flying (wider and higher) patterns
right where i was descending through. For another, i would have rather been
at TPA a fair bit out, so that i could have the benefit of monitoring the
pattern at eye level. Ideas on how to do this better? Some thoughts that
come to mind a


* Be more patient, go to the west even more, say 4-5 miles, give it time for
a gentler descent, and enter on the 45 at the TPA.
* Be more patient, and navigate to the N or S to avoid Stewart's Class D
altogether.
* Could I ask NY approach to talk to Stewart tower and see if i can get
permission to descend through Stewart's Class D. Might they do it and would
that be legal anyways -- or would i have to talk directly to Stewart tower?
* Or would i just ask to cancel flight following in the vicinity of Stewart,
talk to their tower, tell them the deal and ask to descend through their
Class D enroute to MGJ?


There's large turbine traffic low all over the place here...


Any other ideas?


Since you are talking to ATC, unless told to maintain clearance or
altitude, there is no reason you can't fly through class D or C
airspace or even B if told cleared through the Bravo.

If you are nervous about doing it, simply tell ATC you want to begin
decent to whatever altitude and do what they say.

They may tell you to switch to tower or keep you all the way, that's
their call.


--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #4  
Old November 4th 07, 04:45 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Tman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 68
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field


Since you are talking to ATC, unless told to maintain clearance or
altitude, there is no reason you can't fly through class D or C
airspace or even B if told cleared through the Bravo.


Really AIM 3.2.5 says that i need to have two-way radio contact with the
"ATC facility providing ATC services", which in this case i think means i
need to be talking to Stewart Tower, not NY Approach (?).


T


  #5  
Old November 4th 07, 04:58 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
news.verizon.net[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 32
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

I fly into a similar situation going into Brookhaven,NY. I talk to NY
approach and fly over Islip and they will will tell me to descend while over
the C space so as to set up for the landing. I believe they are working
with the tower people at Islip to work this all out, it happens behind the
scenes to me.


"Tman" N/A wrote in message
...

Since you are talking to ATC, unless told to maintain clearance or
altitude, there is no reason you can't fly through class D or C
airspace or even B if told cleared through the Bravo.


Really AIM 3.2.5 says that i need to have two-way radio contact with the
"ATC facility providing ATC services", which in this case i think means i
need to be talking to Stewart Tower, not NY Approach (?).


T



  #6  
Old November 4th 07, 07:59 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Bob Gardner
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 315
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

This is from the controller's handbook:

-1-14. COORDINATE USE OF AIRSPACE
a. Ensure that the necessary coordination has been accomplished before you
allow an aircraft under your control to enter another controller's area of
jurisdiction.
b. Before you issue control instructions directly or relay through another
source to an aircraft which is within another controller's area of
jurisdiction that will change that aircraft's heading, route, speed, or
altitude, ensure that coordination has been accomplished with each of the
controllers listed below whose area of jurisdiction is affected by those
instructions unless otherwise specified by a letter of agreement or a
facility directive:
1. The controller within whose area of jurisdiction the control
instructions will be issued.
2. The controller receiving the transfer of control.
3. Any intervening controller(s) through whose area of jurisdiction the
aircraft will pass.

I'm sure that Steve will pipe up if this is not the correct reference.
Bottom line is that if you are receiving radar services, it is the
controller's responsibility to coordinate with Stewart.

Bob Gardner

"Tman" N/A wrote in message
...
Appreciate this groups insight ...

When getting VFR advisories into an uncontrolled field, when and how ought
one transition to the CTAF. Currently, I tune in and monitor the CTAF on
COM2, and if ATC doesn't tell me "squawk VFR, freq change approved" by
about 5 miles out, i get antsy and cancel advisories. The theory is that
I really want to be focused on other traffic on the CTAF, and the
advisories aren't always that helpful "numerous targets in the
pattern...". Also, there is sometimes a lot of chatter on the ATC
frequency, making it easy to miss a CTAF transmission even when monitoring
it. Should I just cancel advisories proactively 10 miles or so out so
that Ican focus totally on the CTAF? Or should i really let ATC take the
first step, with the assumption that they know best their abilitiy to
provide quality advisories, and they'll drop me over to the CTAF at the
most optimal time. I'd be interested in the different opinions on this...
What if i only had one COMM (like the C152 I on occassion fly).

Second question. Check out http://skyvector.com/#29-15-3-2383-2408, i was
flying into MGJ (Orange County) at 6500 from the E, getting advisories
from NY Approach. Actually the flight from the Ebrought me right over the
SWF (Stewart) Class D airspace, which has a 3000 ceiling. So I was in my
VFR descent actually right over Stewart, being careful and then some not
to bust the 3000 ceiling until i was well clear of the Class D, which gave
me all of 2 miles to get from about 3500 to the 1400 TPA at Orange County.
Rwy 3 was active at Orange County, so i overflew the field, went about 1-2
miles to the West, descended aggressively and entered the left downind on
a 45, still descending 1200 FPM right up to the downwind turn. Somewhere
right over the field, NY cancelled and i turned over to the CTAF.

OK, on reflection this did not strike me as the safest way to do things.
For one, the aggressive descent just outside of the downwind, in a field
that has a fair amount of turbine traffic flying (wider and higher)
patterns right where i was descending through. For another, i would have
rather been at TPA a fair bit out, so that i could have the benefit of
monitoring the pattern at eye level. Ideas on how to do this better?
Some thoughts that come to mind a

* Be more patient, go to the west even more, say 4-5 miles, give it time
for a gentler descent, and enter on the 45 at the TPA.
* Be more patient, and navigate to the N or S to avoid Stewart's Class D
altogether.
* Could I ask NY approach to talk to Stewart tower and see if i can get
permission to descend through Stewart's Class D. Might they do it and
would that be legal anyways -- or would i have to talk directly to Stewart
tower?
* Or would i just ask to cancel flight following in the vicinity of
Stewart, talk to their tower, tell them the deal and ask to descend
through their Class D enroute to MGJ?

There's large turbine traffic low all over the place here...

Any other ideas?

Thanks all! Tman...




  #7  
Old November 4th 07, 08:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Bob Gardner
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 315
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

I was too quick with the Send button...

It's almost a sure thing that the top 500 feet of Stewart's airspace has
been released to the overlying approach control by Letter of Agreement, so
SWF controllers wouldn't even be interested in you unless you transitioned
lower than that. In any event "Am I cleared through Stewart's airspace?"
would clear up any uncertainty.

Bob Gardner

"Tman" N/A wrote in message
...
Appreciate this groups insight ...

When getting VFR advisories into an uncontrolled field, when and how ought
one transition to the CTAF. Currently, I tune in and monitor the CTAF on
COM2, and if ATC doesn't tell me "squawk VFR, freq change approved" by
about 5 miles out, i get antsy and cancel advisories. The theory is that
I really want to be focused on other traffic on the CTAF, and the
advisories aren't always that helpful "numerous targets in the
pattern...". Also, there is sometimes a lot of chatter on the ATC
frequency, making it easy to miss a CTAF transmission even when monitoring
it. Should I just cancel advisories proactively 10 miles or so out so
that Ican focus totally on the CTAF? Or should i really let ATC take the
first step, with the assumption that they know best their abilitiy to
provide quality advisories, and they'll drop me over to the CTAF at the
most optimal time. I'd be interested in the different opinions on this...
What if i only had one COMM (like the C152 I on occassion fly).

Second question. Check out http://skyvector.com/#29-15-3-2383-2408, i was
flying into MGJ (Orange County) at 6500 from the E, getting advisories
from NY Approach. Actually the flight from the Ebrought me right over the
SWF (Stewart) Class D airspace, which has a 3000 ceiling. So I was in my
VFR descent actually right over Stewart, being careful and then some not
to bust the 3000 ceiling until i was well clear of the Class D, which gave
me all of 2 miles to get from about 3500 to the 1400 TPA at Orange County.
Rwy 3 was active at Orange County, so i overflew the field, went about 1-2
miles to the West, descended aggressively and entered the left downind on
a 45, still descending 1200 FPM right up to the downwind turn. Somewhere
right over the field, NY cancelled and i turned over to the CTAF.

OK, on reflection this did not strike me as the safest way to do things.
For one, the aggressive descent just outside of the downwind, in a field
that has a fair amount of turbine traffic flying (wider and higher)
patterns right where i was descending through. For another, i would have
rather been at TPA a fair bit out, so that i could have the benefit of
monitoring the pattern at eye level. Ideas on how to do this better?
Some thoughts that come to mind a

* Be more patient, go to the west even more, say 4-5 miles, give it time
for a gentler descent, and enter on the 45 at the TPA.
* Be more patient, and navigate to the N or S to avoid Stewart's Class D
altogether.
* Could I ask NY approach to talk to Stewart tower and see if i can get
permission to descend through Stewart's Class D. Might they do it and
would that be legal anyways -- or would i have to talk directly to Stewart
tower?
* Or would i just ask to cancel flight following in the vicinity of
Stewart, talk to their tower, tell them the deal and ask to descend
through their Class D enroute to MGJ?

There's large turbine traffic low all over the place here...

Any other ideas?

Thanks all! Tman...




  #8  
Old November 4th 07, 09:19 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
B A R R Y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 517
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

On Sun, 4 Nov 2007 13:35:08 -0600, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote:


Talking to a radar controller absolutely meets the requirement for
transiting Class D airspace. FAA Order 7110.65 requires the radar
controller to coordinate with the control tower for transit authorization
when he is providing radar traffic advisory service to an aircraft that will
enter a Class D surface area. The pilot is not expected to obtain his own
authorization when in contact with a radar facility.


Thanks, Steven.

I've always either been handed to the tower, or been told to remain
clear. Sooo, I understood it as... G The stuff you cited gives
me a better understanding of what's really happening.
  #9  
Old November 4th 07, 09:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Steven P. McNicoll
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,477
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field


"Tman" N/A wrote in message
...

91.129.c.1 ... "must establish two-way radio communications with the ATC
facility providing air traffic services prior to entering"...
OK does that include NY approach in addition to the (obvious) Stewart
Tower as the facility providing air traffic services in the Stewart Class
D airspace?


FAR 91.129 begins with, "Unless otherwise authorized..." The radar
controller is required to coordinate the transit of Class D airspace when
providing radar services.


  #10  
Old November 4th 07, 09:57 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_19_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,851
Default Two questions on VFR flight following into an uncontrolled field

Stop playing with your radios and look out the window.


Bertie
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Flight Questions Jed Piloting 32 September 15th 07 03:12 PM
GPS approach in VFR wx at uncontrolled field BobKK47 Instrument Flight Rules 14 March 13th 07 03:06 PM
Closing IFR flight plan at uncontrolled field paul kgyy Instrument Flight Rules 18 February 9th 06 02:27 PM
Boeing Field/Mus. Of Flight Trip gatt Piloting 0 August 5th 04 08:12 PM
Position and Hold at uncontrolled field dave Piloting 42 February 26th 04 01:25 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:50 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.