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#1
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Relative to your anecdote, I have a question: Why not simply close your
eyes, turn on your landing light for five seconds, turn it off, open your eyes? This would have given tower their visual ID without impacting your night vision. If you're flying an ILS and in a cloud it could be safely assumed you are on an IFR flight plan, in which case tower would have been providing separation. If you're in a cloud, you would not be able to maintain separation yourself as you wouldn't be able to see much of anything, especially at night. If your aircraft is properly trimmed, five seconds away from the panel and controls should not have a serious impact on aircraft stability. It sounds like the situation described earlier on this thread where your entire focus was on your wants and needs, with no consideration for the larger picture. "AJW" wrote in message ... "Brien K. Meehan" wrote in message ... Regardless, a plane flying "to the numbers" from 30 degrees off the downwind side will cross every possible base leg to that runway. It will also cross every possible downwind leg at some point. For example, a plane on downwind set up for a 1/2 mile base leg could collide with the inbound plane 0.866 miles downwind from the numbers. On the other hand, if that inbound plane were to set up for a 5 mile final, there would be no possible conflict for any pattern configuration inside those 5 miles. That's a great reason for a tower controller to ask for it. It's a good reason if she has or anticipates other traffic. Ity's probably time for the OP'er to say he now sees he may have been in error. The good thing about posting the quesiton is that it also may have made some readers more aware of what ATC instructions mean. As an aside, a long tiome ago I was making an ILS into BED after dark, and tower asked me for a landing light so they could see where I was (this was a long time ago). Now that was a time when I did not comply with tower -- a landing light in the clouds is a good way to really screw up night vision. I told them the landing light would have to wait until I had the runway in sight. |
#2
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![]() Relative to your anecdote, I have a question: Why not simply close your eyes, turn on your landing light for five seconds, turn it off, open your eyes? This would have given tower their visual ID without impacting your night vision. If you're flying an ILS and in a cloud it could be safely assumed you are on an IFR flight plan, in which case tower would have been providing separation. If you're in a cloud, you would not be able to maintain separation yourself as you wouldn't be able to see much of anything, especially at night. If your aircraft is properly trimmed, five seconds away from the panel and controls should not have a serious impact on aircraft stability. It sounds like the situation described earlier on this thread where your entire focus was on your wants and needs, with no consideration for the larger picture. "AJW" wrote in message ... As an aside, a long tiome ago I was making an ILS into BED after dark, and tower asked me for a landing light so they could see where I was (this was a long time ago). Now that was a time when I did not comply with tower -- a landing light in the clouds is a good way to really screw up night vision. I told them the landing light would have to wait until I had the runway in sight. Sorry, but in the circumstances I cited, I told the tower They'd get no light until I was out of the clouds, and they didn't complain. WhenI'm flying an approach in clouds at night I turn off strobes, too. I do NOT fly with my eyes shut, not even for 5 seconds. Re traffic avoidance, it was solid IFR, I think the ceiling had to have been about 300 feet or so. I don't remember if there was someone at the threshold waiting to go, although it's likely with approach painting me a ciouple of miles out that they'd have realeased someone for take off. I think in this case I made the right decision, but it'll be interesting to see what others here will say. |
#3
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O.K, O.K. Maybe closing your eyes for five seconds may not be the best idea
I've ever come up with. Guess I should have thought that one through a little better. Mea culpa... "Bill Denton" wrote in message ... Relative to your anecdote, I have a question: Why not simply close your eyes, turn on your landing light for five seconds, turn it off, open your eyes? This would have given tower their visual ID without impacting your night vision. If you're flying an ILS and in a cloud it could be safely assumed you are on an IFR flight plan, in which case tower would have been providing separation. If you're in a cloud, you would not be able to maintain separation yourself as you wouldn't be able to see much of anything, especially at night. If your aircraft is properly trimmed, five seconds away from the panel and controls should not have a serious impact on aircraft stability. It sounds like the situation described earlier on this thread where your entire focus was on your wants and needs, with no consideration for the larger picture. "AJW" wrote in message ... "Brien K. Meehan" wrote in message ... Regardless, a plane flying "to the numbers" from 30 degrees off the downwind side will cross every possible base leg to that runway. It will also cross every possible downwind leg at some point. For example, a plane on downwind set up for a 1/2 mile base leg could collide with the inbound plane 0.866 miles downwind from the numbers. On the other hand, if that inbound plane were to set up for a 5 mile final, there would be no possible conflict for any pattern configuration inside those 5 miles. That's a great reason for a tower controller to ask for it. It's a good reason if she has or anticipates other traffic. Ity's probably time for the OP'er to say he now sees he may have been in error. The good thing about posting the quesiton is that it also may have made some readers more aware of what ATC instructions mean. As an aside, a long tiome ago I was making an ILS into BED after dark, and tower asked me for a landing light so they could see where I was (this was a long time ago). Now that was a time when I did not comply with tower -- a landing light in the clouds is a good way to really screw up night vision. I told them the landing light would have to wait until I had the runway in sight. |
#4
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Jim,
I'd just drop this, move on, and remember the experience. Did you get flight following or go IFR to PRC, if so maybe I talked to you NE of PRC. Anyway, is PRC a contract tower, I don't know, just wondering. As far as the controller in question, a few things are possible: she didnt say anything else about it, right? So she probably forgot about it and moved on to other things, busy or not. If she was truly troubled by it, but not enough to have you call in, she probably questioned herself if she was clear enough to you in what she wanted of you. If it was that big a deal, it'll probably be something she changes about the clarity of her clearances, and she'll watch out for readbacks that show the slightest amount of doubt in what's expected of the pilot. Personally I read alot in the tone of readbacks, even if theyre correct. Sure, I could always say later that "hey, he read it back right, it's on his back", but I dont like answering those kinds of questions, nor do I like tapes pulled. Resolve it at the time if possible and move on and do my job. If you fly enough you know controllers and pilots both screw up. You also know, as someone else rightly pointed out, that a controller can be manipulative, unfairly so to make you look bad and them good. I see it fairly often with certain personality types where I work. It's almost as if they're setting someone up for failure for their own kicks. I'm not implying that was the case here, might've been a power play on her part, she mightve been genuinely surprised or alarmed to not see you where she expected. But if there was no traffic, why make a big deal of it. We dont have the tape, we dont know how she put it. It could've been just her way of talking that seemed rude to you, but wasn't her intent. If she said nothing else about it, she didnt consider it a big deal, and neither should you. At the risk of this post being longwinded, I'll give you a recent example. It alone will probably flare up this topic again with people and their opinions and references. For some reason, this airline we regularly work started changing the way they operate and comply with clearances out of one of our airports. In short, they get a VFR climb on an IFR clearance and think they can deviate 120 degrees from their IFR route, but the clearance they request, and receive, is VFR climb on course, which in itself is a questionable clearance in itself IMO, but that's another story. Anyway, imagine Dept Pt A, first fix is Pt B about 25nm away is a 200 heading, Pt C is about 100 nm away on a 050 heading. These aircraft would take off and fly a 130 heading to join the course between B and C, or just turn direct C. This started hapenning on a daily basis, several times a day, different crews. Controllers were noticing, and not particularly caring for it, but not saying anything about it except amongst themselves. Finally, as tactfully as I could, I asked what was up. I guess my only real beef is that they ask for VFR climbs, the airlines I'm talking about here, but they really only want it to climb on course (no departure procedure) and dont want the responsibility of separating themselves, which a VFR climb requires. But I didnt bring it up with these guys (2 different crews), I just said if all of us had the "no harm, no foul" rule, we'd let it slide if there wasnt traffic. But the ONE time there is traffic and this turn puts them right in its face, the crew will have to answer as to how they perceived "as filed" meant a deviation like this. They apologized and saw the point I was trying to make, which is basically covering their own butts. I told them it wouldnt go any further than that, but just ask for the shortcut, how often is that particular one turned down? Hardly ever. Luckily, this sector is kind of off by itself and out of the hearing range of my supervisor. Once they hear something like this, the "no harm, no foul" rule goes right out the window and it's nothing but trouble for everyone involved. Phone calls, etc. Point I'm trying to make (slowly, gradually, sorry) is that I'm sure theres been times where I may have snipped at a pilot that messed up, it's hapenned to me as a pilot (sometimes my mistake, sometimes not). I cant speak for all controllers, but most I know are over it pretty quickly, whether you stay on freq for just a few more seconds or an hour. If I notice myself doing that, and I get the impression the pilot feels as if he's on the verge of having to call in or get violated, I try to make it clear that is not the case. I only get in trouble by my conversational tone on freq, which the supervisors hate, and I hear about regularly. Now you see why I dont want tapes pulled? Picture hangar flying, that kind of chit-chat, but on freq. Makes for a more enjoyable and relaxed experience for all, and that's what I'm shooting for. One last thought, in reference to your "it is potentially dangerous when controllers and pilots define things differently" statement, more controllers should be pilots. That wont change the definitions, but less of an "us against them" mentality that is out there. As usual, these are just my observations, experience, and opinions. You guys that argue just for arguments sake, or flame for kicks, can pound it sideways, as my main man Phil Hendrie says. To the rest, happy flying, Chris |
#5
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On Thu, 12 Aug 2004 20:11:23 GMT, "SeeAndAvoid"
wrote in . net:: more controllers should be pilots. And, the corollary, more pilots should be familiar with Order 7110.65, is also true. |
#6
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Okay, I'll give it one more go. Like many of you, I am fascinated by this
passion for flight that occupies many of our souls. I started this thread to present a real-world flying example that I thought some of you would find interesting. Judging by the many different perspectives presented, many of you seem quite engaged by the topic. Initially, I also hoped to learn something, and share a possible flying error that I thought I may have committed, so that others could potentially learn something. And, yes, I am an ATP/CFII who's very lucky to be able to fly an aerobatic, high-performance, complex, taildragger from Mexico to Canada--and everywhere in between. I'm fairly experienced, but that doesn't mean that I don't make constant mistakes while flying (like all of you). Of course, USENET has its limitations (not the least of which is having to occasionally come into contact with rude, over-bearing people who insist on making presumptuous personal attacks in their zeal to convince people how much smarter they are than anyone else). I won't engage in similar behavior, but I think everyone knows the individuals I'm talking about. For those of you who have approached this topic professionally, without resorting to such uncivil conduct, I thank you for your insights and thoughts. I'm always amazed at how the relative anonymity of the Internet compels people to make the most absurd and offensive comments about complete strangers. During my 20 years in the Marine Corps, such communication in public would often end up with the offending individual picking his teeth off the bar-room floor. In between all the nasty comments and boorish behavior, I still think there's a lot of valuable learning going on, so I'll persist. I think I've been able to finally resolve the issue I originally presented (at least in my mind). Here's what I learned thus far, and how: I called a Class C airport near where I reside and spoke to their "ATC Procedures Specialist" named Doug. Doug told me many interesting things: (1) The expression "Report 5 miles final" is not an instruction. It is not standard phraseology, and thus it is merely a request. Hence, there was no legal obligation to even comply with the request (certainly there was no violation of the FARs as some of you seem to believe). Moreover, Doug believes there is never a requirement to fly to a precise spot on the extended centerline during a VFR final approach (as some of you so passionately have stated repeatedly)--regardless of whether the controller makes this "Report X miles Final" REQUEST. (2) At Doug's airport, they consider every approach within a 45 degree cone of the centerline to comply with the "Make Straight In, Runway X" instruction. Clearly, there is NO OBLIGATION to intercept the centerline at any PARTICULAR point (although it must be intercepted at SOME point to land the plane; which I clearly did in this case--at ~1/2 mile from the numbers). I then called KPRC, and spoke to a very cordial gentlemen named Mr. Paul Wirdsky (sp?), who is assigned as the Tower Manager. He is the supervisor of the controller who precipitated this thread. After listening to my account, he stated the following: (1) He believes his controller clearly made a mistake, and that there is no obligation for a pilot to intercept the centerline precisely at any particular point. In his view, flying directly towards the airport as I did, and aligning with the runway at about 1/2 NM before landing, was the proper and correct thing to do. (2) He is reviewing the tape, and will counsel the controller on her well-intended but poorly-delivered "correction" of a pilot when the controller mistakenly applied her own personal misinterpretation of the regulations. These guys seem fairly definitive to me. Oops, sorry--this is USENET. I know some of you still will never accept their well-informed opinions, so let me offer some additional ideas for you to think about (so perhaps logic will prevail where expert opinion does not). In reference to the following definition: STRAIGHT-IN APPROACH VFR- Entry into the traffic pattern by interception of the extended runway centerline (final approach course) without executing any other portion of the traffic pattern. There is nothing in this definition that suggests the pilot must intercept the extended runway centerline at any particular point (rather it simply must be intercepted at SOME point). Consequently, the real issue I posed is whether one can be "on final" without being precisely on the extended centerline. I believe you obviously can. Here's some specific themes on the topic: (1) Flying is inherently IMPRECISE. Specifically, nobody flies on or intercepts an extended centerline PRECISELY. No one. Not on an ILS, not visually, not ever. If the FAR and PTS standard was "The Applicant must intercept the extended centerline at precisely the distance instructed by the controller to report on final," not one of us would have our tickets. So, what's an acceptable level of precision? I asked this question before, but none of the naysayers seemed to respond. If I HAVE to fly to the extended centerline at precisely 5NM, how far can I be off and not violate the FARs? 1 foot? 10 feet? 1/4 mile? BTW, how does even one FIND this precise position without reference to a GPS? Even if I have a GPS, do we measure from the numbers, the touchdown zone, or the Airport Reference Point (ARP)? Clearly, trying to apply this level of precision when flying VFR at 150 kts is ridiculous. I think a better standard might be the one posed by the ATC Procedures Specialist above where "every approach within a 45 degree cone of the centerline complies with the "Make Straight In, Runway X" instruction." (2) "Final" is a general direction. I can approach any airport from any one of 360 possible angles (in whole degrees). Thus, the odds are 1/360 that the direction I am approaching from is precisely aligned with the runway centerline. The question you should ask yourself is what maximum number of degrees you would be comfortable being offset from the centerline so that you would call it a final approach? 0.1 deg? 1 deg? 10 degs? 30 degs? 45 degs? In other words, don't think of final as ONE specific heading, but a SET of headings all generally aligned towards the runway. A downwind and base leg should similarly be defined in terms of a GENERAL direction--not a specific and precise line. (3) "Final" is a state of mind. If I MUST be on the extended centerline to be on "final" (a statement which many of you have made), how do you account for S-Turns? How do you justify deliberately off-setting for wake turbulence? When a gust knocks me off the centerline, am I no longer on final? If I slip it in without once being on the centerline (until the flare), did I just make an approach "without flying a final?" Please. BTW, since many of you asked: There was no traffic within the Class D airspace known to me--certainly none in my view, and the control frequency was not used at any time between my initial check-in, and my "5 Mile Final" report. FWIW, I also learned that the KPRC Tower has radar. In short, I've concluded my decision-making and behavior in this particular situation to be safe, legal, justifiable, and 100% correct. I would do the exact same thing next time, and I encourage my fellow pilots to consider doing the same. That said, there's certainly nothing WRONG with offsetting to intercept the extended centerline at an extended distance from the airport in order to get more time to get setup for the landing, etc. (just a little circuitous for my tastes--as well as potentially dangerous or impracticable in some situations when considering terrain, etc.). Of course, many of you will find gross fault with the above, while continuing to nit-pick, argue about punctuation, and throw wildly uninformed accusations about the competency of myself and the ATC folks I've cited above. Ahhh, USENET. Recommend everyone try to get a little less keyboard time, and a whole lot more stick time. Thanks! Fair winds, Jim "Jim Cummiskey" wrote in message ... Hi, all. Ran into this one flying back from KOSH a couple weeks ago: I check in with the KPRC controller "20 Miles NE" of Love Field in Prescott, AZ. She clears me with "Cleared Straight-in Runway 21L, Report 5 miles final." I fly directly towards the numbers. My heading was approximately 240 (hence, I'm ~30 deg off of the extended centerline). At 5 miles from the airport (still offset from the centerline), I report "5 mile final." She questions my position and gets all snippy (indeed, darn right rude) that I am "not on final" since I am not on the extended centerline. She patronizingly cautions me to be "careful about this." Hence, the question is "What does 'Cleared Straight-in; Report X miles Final" really mean?" Is it. . . . (1) You must fly directly from your current position to a point on the extended centerline that is X miles from the numbers, and then report (sounds like a base to me). or (2) You can fly directly from your current position to the numbers (thus "straight-in"), and report when you are X miles away. I obviously vote for #2, but the controller clearly thought otherwise (it seems to me that if 30 deg = "straight-in" in the IFR domain, it ought to work well enough for VFR situations). Regardless, it is potentially dangerous when controllers and pilots define things differently. Which definition is right? Regards, Jim |
#7
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"Jim Cummiskey" wrote in message
... [...] In short, I've concluded my decision-making and behavior in this particular situation to be safe, legal, justifiable, and 100% correct. You are hilarious. By your own admission, you were at a position different from where you claim to be, and yet you still persist in thinking that a bunch of other different statements make you right. You might want to (re?)read the FAA's publications regarding the five hazardous attitudes. Whatever...you're right, this is Usenet, and it takes all sorts. I just hope I'm not around the next time you report your position. I prefer that people claiming to be at a particular spot actually *be there*. Pete |
#8
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you were at a position different from where you claim to be
Nope. I was at a position EXACTLY where I claimed to be. I was 5 miles from the airport, and I WAS on final. Thus "5 Miles Final." As I have attempted to point out numerous times, the real issue is: "Must you be on the extended centerline to be on final?" You believe the answer is "Yes." I belive that the answer is "No." Aviation is funny like that. Do you slip with flaps? Do you climb initally at Vx or Vy on takeoff? Do you power for altitude and pitch for airspeed (or vice versa)? We can agree to disagree, but I think you are just as wrong as you appear to believe I am. Pete, please answer the following question: "Have you ever approached the runway on the final leg of your pattern NOT on the extended centerline?" Congratulations, Pete! You just flew what somebody called an "angled final" in an earlier email. I like the expression "angled final" in some ways. It accurately captures my contention that ALL FINALS ARE ANGLED. The trivial case is, of course, the final that just happens to be on the extended centerline (this would be the 0 deg angle). Thus, since all finals are angled, "angled" is redundant. Regards, Jim "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "Jim Cummiskey" wrote in message ... [...] In short, I've concluded my decision-making and behavior in this particular situation to be safe, legal, justifiable, and 100% correct. You are hilarious. By your own admission, you were at a position different from where you claim to be, and yet you still persist in thinking that a bunch of other different statements make you right. You might want to (re?)read the FAA's publications regarding the five hazardous attitudes. Whatever...you're right, this is Usenet, and it takes all sorts. I just hope I'm not around the next time you report your position. I prefer that people claiming to be at a particular spot actually *be there*. Pete |
#9
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![]() you were at a position different from where you claim to be Nope. I was at a position EXACTLY where I claimed to be. I was 5 miles from the airport, and I WAS on final. Thus "5 Miles Final." As I have attempted to point out numerous times, the real issue is: "Must you be on the extended centerline to be on final?" You believe the answer is "Yes." I belive that the answer is "No." I suspect this could go on for a long time, but legalities aside, does anyone disagree with the notion that "5 mile final" position report would by most of us suggest that somewhere mainly along the extended centerline of the runway is where we'd probably see traffic? I respectfully submit that as pilots we get in the habit of making position reports -- at controlled airports or not -- so as to help other airplanes FIND THE DAMNED TRAFFIC!!! Thank you for your consideration. |
#10
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![]() "Jim Cummiskey" wrote in message news:qHoTc.37435$ih.16698@fed1read07... Nope. I was at a position EXACTLY where I claimed to be. I was 5 miles from the airport, and I WAS on final. Thus "5 Miles Final." You're changing your story. In your initial message you wrote; "At 5 miles from the airport (still offset from the centerline), I report '5 mile final'." So which is it? Were you on final when you reported or were you offset from the centerline? As I have attempted to point out numerous times, the real issue is: "Must you be on the extended centerline to be on final?" You believe the answer is "Yes." I belive that the answer is "No." You say that like it's a matter of opinion. |
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