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#1
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Flyers,
I just want some of your thoughts on this. My plane partner and I went out last night to do some practice instrument approaches. He wore the hood and I was the right-seat safety pilot. ATC was not too busy and it was a nice VFR night. First, after we asked for a practice ILS 24 into KPNE they acknowledged our request and then forgot about us and had us continue flying away from the field for sometime. This continued until I finally asked if they were going to vector us. "Oh...no...I just figured you'd turn toward Yardley." Hmmm...ok we turn toward Yardley. He then had us climb to 3000. He vectored us onto the approach within 1/8 mile of the final approach fix, had us maintain 3000 (FAF alt on chart is 2000) and cleared us for the approach. My partner was struggling to get the plane down and I'm looking out for planes, our attitude, the glide slope, his airspeed,...IOW...everything. I suddenly realize that we are on a 1/2 mile final (way above the glide slope) and we were never handed off to the tower. I push the flip-flop button and contact the tower and ask if we missed a handoff. The tower responds, "I've been waiting for you to contact us" "I'm sorry. Did approach hand us off?" "No...but that doesn't matter...it's your responsibility. You need to realize that there is a problem before you're on a 1/2 mile final." To make a long story short...we were given back to approach and did the approach into our field (VOR-A). We were handed off to another approach controller. We asked for a practice VOR-A into N14 with vectors. This controller never vectored us and merrily watched us (or didn't watch us) fly right through the approach course, never vectoring us, never assigning an altitude and never clearing us for the approach. I get on the radio and asked if he wanted us to fly through the approach course. "Ahhh...no...just intercept the approach course and maintain 2100 until PONDE (the FAF)..." he then cleared us for the approach. What was this? A bad night for controllers? Were we second class citizens? And why did I get bawled out for the approach controllers forgetful hand-off? Kobra |
#2
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Lurker wrote:
The tower responds, "I've been waiting for you to contact us" "I'm sorry. Did approach hand us off?" "No...but that doesn't matter...it's your responsibility. You need to realize that there is a problem before you're on a 1/2 mile final." I've got to say I've never received such ****ty service in the South. Actually, I can't say I've received such ****ty service anywhere. Since when is it your responsibility to decide when to end communications with one controller and begin with another? I think I'd be writing the FSDO or somebody and complain loudly, with CC:'s to your local congresscritters. In fact, call and complain immediately before the tapes get overwritten. To make a long story short...we were given back to approach and did the approach into our field (VOR-A). We were handed off to another approach controller. We asked for a practice VOR-A into N14 with vectors. This controller never vectored us and merrily watched us (or didn't watch us) fly right through the approach course, never vectoring us, never assigning an altitude and never clearing us for the approach. You know, if they didn't want to bother with you, the least they could have done is tell you so. Or is it their position that that is your responsibility to determine as well? -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#3
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![]() Lurker wrote: Were we second class citizens? Depends. Were you flying a Cherokee? |
#4
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VFR, practice, unless you ask for vectors or are told,
"vectors to ..." then you navigate. Suggest you file a NASA report to cover your butt, [two-one for each pilot]. http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/forms_nf.htm "Lurker" wrote in message ... | Flyers, | | I just want some of your thoughts on this. My plane partner and I went out | last night to do some practice instrument approaches. He wore the hood and | I was the right-seat safety pilot. | | ATC was not too busy and it was a nice VFR night. First, after we asked for | a practice ILS 24 into KPNE they acknowledged our request and then forgot | about us and had us continue flying away from the field for sometime. This | continued until I finally asked if they were going to vector us. | | "Oh...no...I just figured you'd turn toward Yardley." | | Hmmm...ok we turn toward Yardley. He then had us climb to 3000. He | vectored us onto the approach within 1/8 mile of the final approach fix, had | us maintain 3000 (FAF alt on chart is 2000) and cleared us for the approach. | My partner was struggling to get the plane down and I'm looking out for | planes, our attitude, the glide slope, his airspeed,...IOW...everything. | | I suddenly realize that we are on a 1/2 mile final (way above the glide | slope) and we were never handed off to the tower. I push the flip-flop | button and contact the tower and ask if we missed a handoff. | | The tower responds, "I've been waiting for you to contact us" | | "I'm sorry. Did approach hand us off?" | | "No...but that doesn't matter...it's your responsibility. You need to | realize that there is a problem before you're on a 1/2 mile final." | | To make a long story short...we were given back to approach and did the | approach into our field (VOR-A). We were handed off to another approach | controller. We asked for a practice VOR-A into N14 with vectors. This | controller never vectored us and merrily watched us (or didn't watch us) fly | right through the approach course, never vectoring us, never assigning an | altitude and never clearing us for the approach. | | I get on the radio and asked if he wanted us to fly through the approach | course. | | "Ahhh...no...just intercept the approach course and maintain 2100 until | PONDE (the FAF)..." he then cleared us for the approach. | | What was this? A bad night for controllers? Were we second class citizens? | And why did I get bawled out for the approach controllers forgetful | hand-off? | | Kobra | | |
#5
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On 2/7/2007 8:07:26 PM, "Lurker" wrote:
And why did I get bawled out for the approach controllers forgetful hand-off? I cannot comment on the rest of your plight other than to suggest you call the facility, explain what happened and ask if the service you received was acceptable from their perspective. However, regarding the failed hand-off, I do suggest that better situational awareness along the approach or perhaps more assertiveness on the PIC's part would have prevented the terse lecture. After routinely flying IFR for the last three years, I can recall several cases of approach failing to hand me off to tower. In all cases, I wait until about 1/2 mile inside the FAF, then call approach with a "Bonanza XXX inside {FAF}, switch to tower?" Just about every time this results in a quick hand-off. In one case approach failed to reply so I just switched myself and called tower with "Tower, Bonanza XXX inside {FAF}, never received a hand-off." -- Peter |
#6
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No question that you got bad service, but I would suggest that the PIC be
more assertive. If you don't get what you want, ask for it. In the future, file IFR and turn your "practice" into reality. Bob Gardner "Lurker" wrote in message ... Flyers, I just want some of your thoughts on this. My plane partner and I went out last night to do some practice instrument approaches. He wore the hood and I was the right-seat safety pilot. ATC was not too busy and it was a nice VFR night. First, after we asked for a practice ILS 24 into KPNE they acknowledged our request and then forgot about us and had us continue flying away from the field for sometime. This continued until I finally asked if they were going to vector us. "Oh...no...I just figured you'd turn toward Yardley." Hmmm...ok we turn toward Yardley. He then had us climb to 3000. He vectored us onto the approach within 1/8 mile of the final approach fix, had us maintain 3000 (FAF alt on chart is 2000) and cleared us for the approach. My partner was struggling to get the plane down and I'm looking out for planes, our attitude, the glide slope, his airspeed,...IOW...everything. I suddenly realize that we are on a 1/2 mile final (way above the glide slope) and we were never handed off to the tower. I push the flip-flop button and contact the tower and ask if we missed a handoff. The tower responds, "I've been waiting for you to contact us" "I'm sorry. Did approach hand us off?" "No...but that doesn't matter...it's your responsibility. You need to realize that there is a problem before you're on a 1/2 mile final." To make a long story short...we were given back to approach and did the approach into our field (VOR-A). We were handed off to another approach controller. We asked for a practice VOR-A into N14 with vectors. This controller never vectored us and merrily watched us (or didn't watch us) fly right through the approach course, never vectoring us, never assigning an altitude and never clearing us for the approach. I get on the radio and asked if he wanted us to fly through the approach course. "Ahhh...no...just intercept the approach course and maintain 2100 until PONDE (the FAF)..." he then cleared us for the approach. What was this? A bad night for controllers? Were we second class citizens? And why did I get bawled out for the approach controllers forgetful hand-off? Kobra |
#7
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#8
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"Wyatt Emmerich" wrote in
: Controllers forgetting to hand you off to tower is a fairly common problem in the IFR environment, especially when it's practice. I just say something like "Should I got to tower" and that usually does the trick. *smile* If I don't get transferred to tower within a couple of miles from the FAF, I was told by my instructor to "report" my position to appraoch controllers as a memory jogger that I am still with them. I.E. Jackson Approach 43L one mile outside Brenz. Usually, approach will come back and then say 43L, contact tower on 1xx.xx Allen |
#9
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On Thu, 08 Feb 2007 23:22:15 GMT, A Lieberma
wrote: "Wyatt Emmerich" wrote in : Controllers forgetting to hand you off to tower is a fairly common problem in the IFR environment, especially when it's practice. I just say something like "Should I got to tower" and that usually does the trick. *smile* If I don't get transferred to tower within a couple of miles from the FAF, I was told by my instructor to "report" my position to appraoch controllers as a memory jogger that I am still with them. I.E. Jackson Approach 43L one mile outside Brenz. Usually, approach will come back and then say 43L, contact tower on 1xx.xx Allen In Actual: Ahhh... *** approach, this is XXX 20 North at 4,000. How far do you want me to keep going for traffic avoidance? Ahhhh XXX ... turn heading 180 and expect vectors to the ILS. Know what to expect when and ask why if not. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#10
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Roger wrote in
: In Actual: Ahhh... *** approach, this is XXX 20 North at 4,000. How far do you want me to keep going for traffic avoidance? Ahhhh XXX ... turn heading 180 and expect vectors to the ILS. I knew instrument flying required patience, but you exceeded the patience of Job *big smile*. Musta woke the controller up from a nap? Allen |
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