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#1
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I'll try again, this time hitting tab instead of send.
Sunday 3:30 EDST, and for the last half hour or so, the frequency has been non stop busy. For those interested, I'm listening to http://www.liveatc.net/topfeeds.php Click on the Oshkosh selection, in the top 20 feeds. -- Jim in NC |
#2
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On Sun, 23 Jul 2006 16:39:11 -0400, "Morgans"
wrote: I'll try again, this time hitting tab instead of send. Sunday 3:30 EDST, and for the last half hour or so, the frequency has been non stop busy. For those interested, I'm listening to http://www.liveatc.net/topfeeds.php Click on the Oshkosh selection, in the top 20 feeds. Some of it seems a little intimidating but ultimately learnable. What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but what are they? |
#3
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![]() FlipSide wrote in message ... On Sun, 23 Jul 2006 16:39:11 -0400, "Morgans" wrote: I'll try again, this time hitting tab instead of send. Sunday 3:30 EDST, and for the last half hour or so, the frequency has been non stop busy. For those interested, I'm listening to http://www.liveatc.net/topfeeds.php Click on the Oshkosh selection, in the top 20 feeds. Some of it seems a little intimidating but ultimately learnable. What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but what are they? What section are you looking at? I see no pink or orange dots. -- Jim in NC |
#4
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What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but
what are they? The controllers are refering to spots on the runway that they want the aircraft to land on. This allows some to land long and some to land short simultaneously, greatly increasing the number of arrivals that they can handle. Should be mentioned in the NOTAM he http://www.airventure.org/2006/flying/notam06.pdf Ahh. I did not see the dots on the web site I referenced, so I did not realize he was talking about the dots on the runway. For the responder, the dots are there to make it real quick to tell the pilots where they want the planes to touch down. Rather than saying "Fly down the runway, until you have passed the 3rd taxiway intersection," they can say "land on the orange dot" and it is quickly seen and understood. This is done so planes coming in close together can land and slow further apart, safely. It is amazing, how well it works. -- Jim in NC |
#5
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On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 14:35:00 -0400, "Morgans"
wrote: FlipSide wrote in message .. . On Sun, 23 Jul 2006 16:39:11 -0400, "Morgans" wrote: I'll try again, this time hitting tab instead of send. Sunday 3:30 EDST, and for the last half hour or so, the frequency has been non stop busy. For those interested, I'm listening to http://www.liveatc.net/topfeeds.php Click on the Oshkosh selection, in the top 20 feeds. Some of it seems a little intimidating but ultimately learnable. What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but what are they? What section are you looking at? I see no pink or orange dots. I was listening to ATC this morning and heard the controller referring to the dots. I didn't realize from the short time I listened that these were on the runway. I assumed they were somewhere around the airport. |
#6
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On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 13:10:10 -0400, FlipSide wrote:
On Sun, 23 Jul 2006 16:39:11 -0400, "Morgans" wrote: I'll try again, this time hitting tab instead of send. Sunday 3:30 EDST, and for the last half hour or so, the frequency has been non stop busy. For those interested, I'm listening to http://www.liveatc.net/topfeeds.php Click on the Oshkosh selection, in the top 20 feeds. Some of it seems a little intimidating but ultimately learnable. It is no place for a pilot who always flys a stabilized pattern. The tell when to turn, where to turn and where to land. You may end up flying over some one or having some one fly over you. They land up to 3 at a time. What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but what are they? Spots on the runway The different colors are usually different shapes as well. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#7
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message ... : On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 13:10:10 -0400, FlipSide wrote: : : It is no place for a pilot who always flys a stabilized pattern. The : tell when to turn, where to turn and where to land. You may end up : flying over some one or having some one fly over you. They land up to : 3 at a time. : : : What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but : what are they? : : Spots on the runway The different colors are usually different shapes : as well. : : Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) : (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) Saw a Mooney who was cleared for takeoff on 09 just sitting there. He then asked the controller if he was cleared for takeoff...twice! There was a 337 on final. The controller finally got it through to the guy that, yes, you are cleared for takeoff. The Mooney then started rolling, just about as the 337 was on short final. The 337 was told to go around, and the controller told the Mooney to not rotate until told to do so. The Moony rolled on down, the 337 finally overtook it, maybe 50' agl and just off the right side of the runway. The controller then said good job Mooney as he let them rotate and get out. Amazing how cool and controlled the controller was - his voice did raise a bit during all this, but he was smooth. The controllers are the glue... ....When they get back to their normal O'Hare or La Guardia jobs they probably feel bored... ;-) |
#8
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![]() .. Saw a Mooney who was cleared for takeoff on 09 just sitting there. He then asked the controller if he was cleared for takeoff...twice! There was a 337 on final. The controller finally got it through to the guy that, yes, you are cleared for takeoff. The Mooney then started rolling, just about as the 337 was on short final. The 337 was told to go around, and the controller told the Mooney to not rotate until told to do so. The Moony rolled on down, the 337 finally overtook it, maybe 50' agl and just off the right side of the runway. The controller then said good job Mooney as he let them rotate and get out. Amazing how cool and controlled the controller was - his voice did raise a bit during all this, but he was smooth. The controllers are the glue... ...When they get back to their normal O'Hare or La Guardia jobs they probably feel bored... ;-) Yea, I saw that one as well. I happened to look up when the controller was telling him that he would call his rotation...(not a common instruction!). Gotta love OSH... |
#9
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On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 23:45:42 GMT, ".Blueskies."
wrote: "Roger" wrote in message ... I never have gotten that link to OSH ATC to work on any of these computers. : On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 13:10:10 -0400, FlipSide wrote: : : It is no place for a pilot who always flys a stabilized pattern. The : tell when to turn, where to turn and where to land. You may end up : flying over some one or having some one fly over you. They land up to : 3 at a time. : : : What are the pink and orange dots? I know they are checkpoints but : what are they? : : Spots on the runway The different colors are usually different shapes : as well. : : Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) : (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) Saw a Mooney who was cleared for takeoff on 09 just sitting there. He then asked the controller if he was cleared for Yup. That's another thing. Have *everything* for departure and at least the first 10 miles all in place before starting to taxi. When they say go they mean go. When you pull into place you are expected to be going in just seconds. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com takeoff...twice! There was a 337 on final. The controller finally got it through to the guy that, yes, you are cleared for takeoff. The Mooney then started rolling, just about as the 337 was on short final. The 337 was told to go around, and the controller told the Mooney to not rotate until told to do so. The Moony rolled on down, the 337 finally overtook it, maybe 50' agl and just off the right side of the runway. The controller then said good job Mooney as he let them rotate and get out. Amazing how cool and controlled the controller was - his voice did raise a bit during all this, but he was smooth. The controllers are the glue... ...When they get back to their normal O'Hare or La Guardia jobs they probably feel bored... ;-) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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