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#61
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![]() Every time I fly through the NY class B ( at least once or more a month) vfr I hear the words " cleared into the class bravo" if I dont hear it I ask them to please confirm "cleared into the class bravo" They will then speak the full cleared into the class bravo statment. Jon "George Patterson" wrote in message news:4lVee.642$14.38@trndny03... A Lieberman wrote: You must hear the words cleared through Bravo on a VFR flight. New York ATC disagrees with you. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
#62
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:dkVee.641$14.196@trndny03... [...] In that case, he can say so instead of claiming that I'm wrong when I say that I don't do this. I suspect he misunderstood that you were referring to ONLY your own experience. An understandable mistake given the sub-thread, IMHO. After all, a single individual's experience has very little bearing on the overall wisdom of reading back altimeter settings. Yes, you specifically said "*I* rarely get..." but in context, that can easily be interpreted as implying a general case, rather than being meant for only the specific case. Looking back over the past several posts in this sub-thread, it certainly appears that there's a fair amount of mixed signals. Maybe someone should've read back a post or two. ![]() Pete |
#63
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![]() "A Guy Called Tyketto" wrote in message m... Read the documents yourself, if you don't believe me. Better yet, call the ATC when they chastise you for not reading back anything that tells you to remain outside of a given airspace for a reason. ATC isn't going to do that. |
#64
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![]() "A Guy Called Tyketto" wrote in message ... Because if you don't read it back, they have no way to know that you have acknowledged their call to you. They know I've acknowledged their call when I respond with "Roger." Would you want ATC to keep repeating the same call to you, adding more radio congestion to a frequency they are already busy on? Why would they repeat a call that I've acknowledged? If they're trying to provide separation that your jaunt through their airspace could jeopardize, they're bloody well are goign to look for hearing a readback from you on it, and make sure that you are still outside their airspace. No they're not. All they want is acknowledgement. Why do you want to increase frequency congestion with unnecessary readbacks? Do you understand the difference between acknowledgement and a readback? For class C, they will always tell you 'radar contact location, say altitude'. Class B, they'll tell you 'radar contact location, cleared through/into xxx Class B airspace' along with an altimeter setting for the major airport in their area. That is a requirement for ATC to give you when entering Class B or C airspace. See the 7110.65, sections 5-3-1 through 5-3-6. There's the requirement. If they tell you to remain outside a given airspace, you had best readback that you are remaining outside that airspace. 7-9-2 gives leeway for the readback. The controller is required to inform you that you're in radar contact once radar contact has been established, but there's no requirement to establish radar contact prior to entry in Class B or Class C airspace. |
#65
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On Fri, 06 May 2005 16:50:22 GMT, George Patterson
wrote: Jose wrote: No. As you said, Class B airspace requires ATC to tell you you are cleared into it. You need to hear "Cleared through the Bravo airspace" or somesuch. The last clearance I got from New York ran something like "November 3162 Kebec, climb to 2500 feet, heading 355, stay west of the river, report at the Hudson tunnel." When I've asked for a Bravo clearance, and they have to check with another controller, they'll sometimes come back with something like the above... Just directions that would be take me into the Bravo without the explicit 'cleared into the bravo'. I'll usually read those back with 'understand cleared into the bravo' appended to the end so there is no mistaking things. aw |
#66
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"George Patterson"
"George Patterson" The last clearance I got from New York ran something like "November 3162 Kebec, climb to 2500 feet, heading 355, stay west of the river, report at the Hudson tunnel." Ask for the clearance. You're in violation without it. The instruction to climb *was* the clearance. If you were outside Class B, bull****. That area, above 1000' is class B airspace or a control zone. Nothing but the word "cleared" is a clearance. It may have happened. But you were in violation because the controller, whatever he meant, didn't clear you into Class B. moo |
#67
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
I think his point is that one can receive an altimeter setting from ATC at times other than dealing with an arrival in or flight through airspace related to a towered airport (and thus at times other than when an ATIS is available to provide the altimeter setting). In that case, he can say so instead of claiming that I'm wrong when I say that I don't do this. The only times I talk to ATC are when I intend to takeoff or land from a controlled field. As I tried to make clear, a tower may not give you an altimeter setting because you're supposed to listen to the ATIS. Granted. You used NYC airspace as an example. How do you get into Class B without first talking to Center, Departure or Approach? (All of them will set you up on contact.) New York Centre won't hand you off to a tower 30 miles away and 20 miles outside Class B. If you try to get a clearance from, say, La Guardia Tower when you're 30 miles back, they won't give it to you. They will become unhappy and tell you to contact approach. Approach isn't interested in which ATIS you've been listening to. And, in NYC airspace, they're deeply uninterested in you at all. They will give you an altimeter setting. Do you really fly this airspace? Tell us the procedure you use for VFR into NYC. moo |
#68
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:4lVee.642$14.38@trndny03... A Lieberman wrote: You must hear the words cleared through Bravo on a VFR flight. New York ATC disagrees with you. Ahh, good. Got a cite for this? Did nobody tell you that you're not cleared unless you hear the good word? (Yes, I know they sometimes forget. And it's *your* problem, pas question.) moo |
#69
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"George Patterson"
Happy Dog wrote: So you're speaking almost exclusively about towers? That I can see. If the ATIS is good, no need for the altimeter setting. Other than towers, you should almost always be getting a setting on initial contact. Uh .... Just where do you fly that has an ATIS and *doesn't* have a tower? Above, I said "other than towers". I've corrected the ambiguity of my initial statement. Again: "Other than towers, you should almost always be getting a setting on initial contact." Do you only talk to towers? Possible. But tricky in some places. Anyway, are you saying you almost always stay below Class Bravo? Another post indicated you don't. So what are you talking about? moo |
#70
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By regulation, Air Force pilots read back all altimeter settings. I
think its a good practice and continue to do so although not required by civil regs. The only time I don't is when ATC blanket broadcasts a new setting to all airplanes on freq. |
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