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#21
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Daley's waterfront park?
wrote in message ups.com... Now tell me what are you going to call a class Delta Airspace towered airport when it closes? |
#22
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However there is the Law of Primacy that states as an Instructor I
should teach the right way from the beginning Like =all= things, this is not absolute. Sometimes colloquialisms are very useful learning tools, inasmuch as they convey the essential meaning (once established) without the formalisms that interfere with processing. If we are learning airport and airspace classification, then it is necessary to be pedantic and verbose, to ensure correctness. However, once that is understood, when one is teaching something else, it is better to refer to a concept by its abbreviated form than to continue to distract the student with irrelevant pedantry. Also, some terms change. You need to know all variations. Jose -- Money: what you need when you run out of brains. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#23
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Lets get to the bottom of this. I constantly hear people refer to Airports as being class B,C or D Airports. Any of you who have thorough knowledge and understanding of Airports will know that there are only two kinds of Airports in all of our National Airspace System (NAS). There is Towered and Non-Towered Airports. We have Class A,B,C,D,E and G Airspace. The Airspace overlays the Airports. Now show me where in the Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM) or an FAA Approved government publication that mentions a class B,C,D Airport. You will not find it... "Immediately after landing, and before beginning the critique, Linda asks her student Brian to grade his performance for the day. Being asked to grade himself is a new experience but he goes along with it. The flight scenario had been a two-leg IFR scenario to a busy class B airport about 60 miles to the east." http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...developers.pdf |
#24
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... So the next time your talking about a specific environment say "its a class Delta with an operating control tower". Now tell me what are you going to call a class Delta Airspace towered airport when it closes? A closed Delta Airspace towered airport is still a Delta Airspace towered airport. Closing the airport for whatever reason during the time the tower is open and the Class D surface area is in effect does not change the airspace in any way. |
#25
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... And when I hear other instructors mention this I make sure I correct them. I bet this makes you really popular. Do you do this in front of their students? As a CFI there was a great deal of time I spent covering the Fundamentals of Instruction (FOI). Shouldn't you have covered this BEFORE you became a CFI? |
#26
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wrote:
So see, an instructor who teaches that there are class B,C or D airports is not performing to the CFI practical test standards. Airspace is classified with the new ABC. Airports are either towered or non-towered. Again not one official publication will mention otherwise. So the next time your talking about a specific environment say "its a class Delta with an operating control tower". But, I am not an instructor. ![]() -- Peter |
#27
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![]() "Jose" wrote in message et... Like =all= things, this is not absolute. Tee Hee |
#28
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"Peter R." wrote in message
... Not at all. I can vouch for Chad. He is a new, young, and talented CFI at the flight school where I once trained and is very passionate about aviation. He is also new to newsgroups so give him a chance to become acclimated to this medium. His first post came off as a bit confrontational--he'll fit right in! Chad is of course technically correct but IMO, it's just more practical to call them "Class B" airports. I'd love to correct everyone's pronunciation of "papa," "tree," and "fife" but that wouldn't get me invited to too many hangar parties ![]() So Chad, what's your point of view on saying "with you" when you're handed off to another controller? Marco "ducking and hiding" Leon Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#29
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That's not an "official" FAA publication. It's an example of a guide written
by a third party. Existence on the FAA's web servers is not a testament to it being "official." Marco "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message link.net... wrote in message oups.com... Lets get to the bottom of this. I constantly hear people refer to Airports as being class B,C or D Airports. Any of you who have thorough knowledge and understanding of Airports will know that there are only two kinds of Airports in all of our National Airspace System (NAS). There is Towered and Non-Towered Airports. We have Class A,B,C,D,E and G Airspace. The Airspace overlays the Airports. Now show me where in the Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM) or an FAA Approved government publication that mentions a class B,C,D Airport. You will not find it... "Immediately after landing, and before beginning the critique, Linda asks her student Brian to grade his performance for the day. Being asked to grade himself is a new experience but he goes along with it. The flight scenario had been a two-leg IFR scenario to a busy class B airport about 60 miles to the east." http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...developers.pdf Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#30
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![]() "Marco Leon" mmleon(at)yahoo.com wrote in message ... That's not an "official" FAA publication. It's an example of a guide written by a third party. Existence on the FAA's web servers is not a testament to it being "official." What makes an FAA publication "official"? The challenge was not to find an "official" FAA publication, it was to find an FAA "approved" publication. The word "official" does not appear anywhere in Cjamairway's message. Publishing on the FAA web site and stamping the first page with the FAA seal sure looks like FAA approval to me. |
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