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#1
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I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport
for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Thank-you in advance. |
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I would have done the same thing. Maybe it meant only if you were landing
in the Class C. "Arden Prinz" wrote in message om... I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Thank-you in advance. |
#3
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![]() "Arden Prinz" wrote in message om... I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Based on the tower's reply, it appears "all frequencies" means tower, ground control, and clearance delivery frequencies. But that doesn't mean your assumption was unreasonable. |
#4
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![]() "Ryan" f wrote in message ... I would have done the same thing. Maybe it meant only if you were landing in the Class C. He was. |
#5
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One controller was running all those positions perhaps?
+ "Arden Prinz" wrote in message om... I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Thank-you in advance. |
#6
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Recently, Arden Prinz posted:
I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? I would have presumed it meant exactly as you did. Out of curiosity, what happened next? Did they give you the approach frequency, change the ATIS, or did you get the same controller when you changed frequencies? Neil |
#7
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote:
Based on the tower's reply, it appears "all frequencies" means tower, ground control, and clearance delivery frequencies. But that doesn't mean your assumption was unreasonable. A solution requiring no thought is just call approach per normal, and switch to further freqs as instructed or to just "stay with me," as happened to me once at big Milwaukee apt at 5AM, from 30 miles out to all the way to shutdown. I you happen to know the same guy has been working twr and ground, after startup, wouldn't you still call on ground freq? Otherwise, you're setting yourself up for embarrassment if 10 seconds prior, the ground controller returned from the can, and both positions are back to normal. Correct? Fred IF. |
#8
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
nk.net... "Arden Prinz" wrote in message om... I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Based on the tower's reply, it appears "all frequencies" means tower, ground control, and clearance delivery frequencies. But that doesn't mean your assumption was unreasonable. It seems like a misleading ATIS instruction. I've often heard "Clearance and Ground combined on xx.xx" but never "all frequencies". Some pilots - especially newly minted ones - don't realize and don't really have any reason to suspect that different functions are handled at different facilities. Publications like "Pilot Guide" add confusion by listing ATIS, Approach, Tower & Ground in little boxes for each airport. Who, without extra knowledge, would suspect that "Approach" is handled by a different facility? Arden's question isn't easy to answer anyway. If I were approaching Monterrey (MTR), class C, approach is handled by a facility in the tower on the floor below the guys looking out of the window. If I heard "all frequencies" from MTR, I'd assume it means approach too. |
#9
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Tower, ground, and clearance delivery. ATIS is for the airport you listening
to not approach control -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Scott F. Migaldi, K9PO MI-150972 PP-ASEL-IA Are you a PADI Instructor or DM? Then join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/join ----------------------------------- Catch the wave! www.hamwave.com **"A long time ago being crazy meant something, nowadays everyone is crazy" -- Charles Manson** ------------------------------------- "Arden Prinz" wrote in message om... I was approaching class C airspace for landing at the primary airport for which the class C airspace is designated and I listened to the ATIS. The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". So I tuned to TowerFrequency and made my radio call to approach. The response that I got was that I needed to call approach on the approach frequency. So, I guess that begs the question ... when the ATIS says "all frequencies are combined", which frequencies are included in "all frequencies"? Thank-you in advance. |
#10
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In article ,
Arden Prinz wrote: The ATIS said "all frequencies are combined on TowerFrequency". I got the ATIS and Boundary Bay, BC (class D-esque, I forget if that is actually class D in Canada). I was alert for the fact that they had a new second tower frequency. The ATIS said "frequency blah blah is now in use" so I call them on that frequency and they chastize me -- the ATIS said "not in use". Raar!! -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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