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I was recently on a flight where I was able to listen to the Pilots
speak to Air Traffic control. It was quite fascinating but I understood very little of what they were saying. Does anyone know of a good resource for their terminology? Also, I was wondering if anyone knew what the following mean, I heard them used a lot. Heavy Bugsy |
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" wrote in
oups.com: I was recently on a flight where I was able to listen to the Pilots speak to Air Traffic control. It was quite fascinating but I understood very little of what they were saying. Does anyone know of a good resource for their terminology? Also, I was wondering if anyone knew what the following mean, I heard them used a lot. Heavy Bugsy "Heavy" refers to the aircraft class for the purpose of wake turbulance separation minima. A "Heavy" is defined as an aircraft capable of takeoff weights of more than 255,000 pounds whether or not they are operating at this weight during a particular phase of flight. "Bugsy" is an air navigation fix. These fixes are defined on air navigation charts and are used to communicate location information with ATC. BUGSY is at 44-43-21.550N 074-08-29.080W. The closest airport to BUGSY is Malone-Dufort Airport at Malone, NY. BUGSY is used as a fix on the enroute charts (high and low altitude)as well as the missed approach holding fix for the two GPS approaches into KMAL. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
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Heavy means that is a very large airplane. A heavy airplane weight more that
255,00 pounds. Bugsy is fix near Mountain View, NY A fix is an aeronautical landmark, in this case it is where two aeronautical highways cross. In the AIM (Aeronautical Information Manual) in the back of the book there is dictionary of Abbreviations/Acronyms. You can get am AIM at the local airport, or at a bookstore for between $15 -$20. You can also get for free at http://www.faa.gov/airports_airtraff...ns/atpubs/aim/ On Sun, 22 Jul 2007 10:31:08 -0700, " wrote: I was recently on a flight where I was able to listen to the Pilots speak to Air Traffic control. It was quite fascinating but I understood very little of what they were saying. Does anyone know of a good resource for their terminology? Also, I was wondering if anyone knew what the following mean, I heard them used a lot. Heavy Bugsy GeorgeC |
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You might enjoy listening to air traffic control transmissions on the
internet. Do a search, there are a number of locations available. |
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In article ,
GeorgeC wrote: Heavy means that is a very large airplane. A heavy airplane weight more that 255,00 pounds. Let me put a little background behind that. Air Traffic Control is responsible for keeping a certain amount of space between each aircraft. The exact amount of space varies with a bunch of different factors, but it's typically several miles. Airplanes create an invisible wake in the atmosphere, just like a boat creates a wake on the water. And, just like the boat's wake, the airplane's wake can be dangerous to other airplanes. Heavy airplanes create bigger wakes, so ATC is required to give an airplane following a Heavy some extra distance. ATC is supposed to know if a given type of aircraft is considered Heavy, but as an extra reminder to controllers, pilots of Heavy aircraft add the word "Heavy" to each transmission. |
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Aren't "heavy's" allowed to go faster under 10,000 feet as well?
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Tina wrote:
Aren't "heavy's" allowed to go faster under 10,000 feet as well? Not generally, as far as I know. Section 91.117 makes an exception only if a specific exemption has been granted by the FAA or the minimum safe airspeed for an aircraft is greater than 250 knots. |
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![]() Tina wrote: Aren't "heavy's" allowed to go faster under 10,000 feet as well? No. |
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Newps wrote in
: Tina wrote: Aren't "heavy's" allowed to go faster under 10,000 feet as well? No. Isn't the limit 250 in CBAS regardless of altitude? -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
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