![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
PaulaJay1 wrote:
: I would be comming in about April 17 and flying out about May 1. Don't believe : that flying the Archer makes sense but it might be fun to "fight" the NY : controllers. The NY controllers are one of the most reasonable "B" controllers around in almost every case I can remember. BOS is the biggest annoyance, at least to VFR folks. I've flown my Cherokee right over the JFK VOR many times, both ways, IFR and VFR, with never a problem. : I have found a good commercial flight into/outof LGA. How would it be to fly : into LGA (in the big iron) and then use ground transportation to JFK. I'm : guessing 1/2 hr trip between airports??? Perhaps at 4AM. I'd plan at least 1 hour. I'd try to get a "car" service. The taxi drivers absolutely hate going to the airports because of the taxi pool. Getting a taxi from one airport to the other is likely to get you a crash course in Russian swear words. : I'll probably stay over at one of the : JFK hotels comming back as the return flight gets in at 8PM on 4/30. Any : suggestions there? Not at JFK. I have always stayed at the La Guardia Airport Marriott with good results. They have a shuttle from the airport to the hotel. -- Aaron C. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Aaron Coolidge wrote:
: I have found a good commercial flight into/outof LGA. How would it be to : fly : into LGA (in the big iron) and then use ground transportation to JFK. I'm : guessing 1/2 hr trip between airports??? Perhaps at 4AM. I'd plan at least 1 hour. I'd try to get a "car" service. The taxi drivers absolutely hate going to the airports because of the taxi pool. Getting a taxi from one airport to the other is likely to get you a crash course in Russian swear words. One thing to know about cabs in NYC is they are required to take you anywhere you want to go within the city limits (plus a few other places, like Newark Airport). They can't refuse a fare just because they don't want to go where you're going. If you flag down a cab on the street somewhere, they may try and blow you off, but at the major airports, there are taxi dispatchers who enforce the rules. I figure sometime in the next century or two, they'll actually complete the job they started and extend the AirTrain to LGA. When that happens, you'll be able to walk out of the terminal at LGA onto a train, and walk off the train 20-30 minutes later at the terminal in JFK. No Russian vocabulary lessons required. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roy Smith ) wrote:
One thing to know about cabs in NYC is they are required to take you anywhere you want to go within the city limits (plus a few other places, like Newark Airport). They can't refuse a fare just because they don't want to go where you're going. In theory. But in reality: With two bags in hand during afternoon rush hour, I flag down a cab on 6th Avenue and 49th street. "La Guardia, please" I says to the driver. "I don't want to go there," he responds, shaking his head as he zooms away from the curb. Sure, I could have noted his ID number, then immediately called the NY Taxi&Livery department to blow him in, but hey, it was his loss of income. I caught another cab a minute later and the driver made a pretty good tip. -- Peter |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Peter R." wrote in message ... Roy Smith ) wrote: One thing to know about cabs in NYC is they are required to take you anywhere you want to go within the city limits (plus a few other places, like Newark Airport). They can't refuse a fare just because they don't want to go where you're going. In theory. But in reality: I never tell the cab driver where I'm going until I close the door. It's a little harder for someone to tell you to get out than to shake their head and drive away. -cwk. |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Aaron Coolidge" wrote in message ... The NY controllers are one of the most reasonable "B" controllers around in almost every case I can remember. BOS is the biggest annoyance, at least to VFR folks. I've flown my Cherokee right over the JFK VOR many times, both ways, IFR and VFR, with never a problem. Agreed that NY Approach is not as scary as people would expect (just very fast), but what makes you ding Boston? I "grew up" flying out of Bedford right under the shelf and never had any trouble with them. Clearances through the Bravo tend to be dependent on which runways are in use at Logan. They often have 4/22 and 9/27 in use so that shuts off a lot of airspace. Certainly if you're trying to fly along the coastline you're not going to get cleared through too often. Also, the BOS Bravo isn't nearly as much of an inconvenience to navigation as the EWK-LGA-JFK complex is. Let's say you're flying from BVY on the North Shore to PYM on the south, more or less striaght over BOS. If you're willing to stay below 3000' you can stay below the shelf and only go a few miles out of your way and still have 1000'+ clearance for everything. OTOH, in plenty of trips there's simply no good way around NY's class B, so there may be more of an onus on them to clear VFR traffic through. In any case I've never had a problem with Boston. Bradley on the other hand has often proven a nuisance to deal with. I don't know if they're under-staffed or what. Best, -cwk. |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
why not fly your archer to cle from your home airport ?
less hassle & less money jon |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Routine Aviation Career | Guy Alcala | Military Aviation | 0 | September 26th 04 12:33 AM |
Ultralight Club Bylaws - Warning Long Post | MrHabilis | Home Built | 0 | June 11th 04 05:07 PM |
Mountain flying instruction: McCall, Idaho, Colorado too! | [email protected] | General Aviation | 0 | March 26th 04 11:24 PM |
Progress on Flying Car | Steve Dufour | General Aviation | 5 | December 19th 03 03:48 PM |
FA: WEATHER FLYING: A PRACTICAL BOOK ON FLYING | The Ink Company | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | November 5th 03 12:07 AM |