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#1
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Jonathan Goodish wrote:
If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Arrow N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#2
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Jack Allison wrote:
Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? I was not the original poster but the 'not talking to anyone' is not speculation. Regularly there are posts about what to say when you go near a Class B or even Class C airspace on these very same newsgroups. I've read where people had to fly 2 hours to get to the nearest controlled airport. Certainly they can talk to ATC enroute but I'd bet many of these people are just not used to it and scared away from talking to ATC. Granted most people do talk to ATC but it is very likely there are those out there that rarely talk to ATC. Gerald |
#3
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![]() "G. Sylvester" wrote in message ... Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? I was not the original poster but the 'not talking to anyone' is not speculation. Regularly there are posts about what to say when you go near a Class B or even Class C airspace on these very same newsgroups. I've read where people had to fly 2 hours to get to the nearest controlled airport. Certainly they can talk to ATC enroute but I'd bet many of these people are just not used to it and scared away from talking to ATC. Granted most people do talk to ATC but it is very likely there are those out there that rarely talk to ATC. Gerald Of course there are some small number of exceptions, just like those that have no idea what to do at an airport if there is not a controller available to tell them what to do. Still, the original post was nonsense. |
#4
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![]() "G. Sylvester" wrote in message ... Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? I was not the original poster but the 'not talking to anyone' is not speculation. Regularly there are posts about what to say when you go near a Class B or even Class C airspace on these very same newsgroups. I've read where people had to fly 2 hours to get to the nearest controlled airport. Certainly they can talk to ATC enroute but I'd bet many of these people are just not used to it and scared away from talking to ATC. Granted most people do talk to ATC but it is very likely there are those out there that rarely talk to ATC. I can (and do) regularly fly from Montrose to Rapid City and don't have to talk to anyone but myself until I land. |
#5
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![]() G. Sylvester wrote: Granted most people do talk to ATC but it is very likely there are those out there that rarely talk to ATC. Fly 20 miles from Smoketown in any direction and you have your choice of B, C, or D airspace to work with. The fact that learning to operate in controlled airspace wouldn't be hard doesn't by any means imply that the pilot isn't a doorknob. From charts I saw it looked like they were flying a rhumb line that cut right through DC. I'd have the pilot tested for early-onset Alzheimer's. |
#6
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In article ,
Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? Observation. I live in an area surrounding a large Class B airport, and there are plenty of pilots who rarely, if ever, use the radio at non-towered airports. These same pilots don't venture near towered airports or the Class B because they don't want to talk on the radio. They also typically don't venture out if the wind is stronger than "calm" and/or if there are clouds in the sky. I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. Many of the flight schools at non-towered airports around here have dried up, leaving the mega-schools at the larger towered airports for flight training. JKG |
#7
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Jonathan Goodish wrote:
I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. I would say they talk more even outside of aviation. Kids these days can't seem to do without conversation for more than a few minutes -- seems like they always have a cell phone stuck in their ear. Seems to me that the older the person on a phone in a public place is, the more likely it is that the conversation is necessary. George Patterson "Naked" means you ain't got no clothes on; "nekkid" means you ain't got no clothes on - and are up to somethin'. |
#8
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It's pretty self-evident that a significant number of pilots avoid 2 way
radio use and the airports that require it. Anyone dismissing this theory out of hand has their head in a hole. I was guilty of it for 2 years. After flying gliders for 15+ years where we use the radio constantly but almost never with ATC, I re-entered the ASEL community. I avoided ATC whenever possible and as others have pointed out, you can fly almost anywhere without talking to anyone. And I live under the outer edge of a Class C. No problem with CTAF, just no ATC. I came to understand that my behavior was stupid. As others have stated, an instrument rating is excellent radio training. A good way to shock under 40 pilots is to tell them that "no one" used headsets back in the day. How stupid was that! Jonathan Goodish wrote: In article , Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? Observation. I live in an area surrounding a large Class B airport, and there are plenty of pilots who rarely, if ever, use the radio at non-towered airports. These same pilots don't venture near towered airports or the Class B because they don't want to talk on the radio. They also typically don't venture out if the wind is stronger than "calm" and/or if there are clouds in the sky. I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. Many of the flight schools at non-towered airports around here have dried up, leaving the mega-schools at the larger towered airports for flight training. JKG |
#9
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airman wrote:
The CNN pilot-reporter, Miles O'Brien, made a good point. These guys took off from an uncontrolled airfield, implying that they were not adept with ordinary ATC as would pilots be who were trained or who are resident at a Class D or C towered field. IMHO, this is a big assumption. Of course, coming from a CNN reporter, it figures as such. Just because someone flies from a non-towered field has nothing to do with how adept they are at radio skills. My experience was learning at a non-towered field and I talk to ATC and go in/out of towered airports regularly. Sure, some folks are lame on the radio, whether talking to ATC or broadcasting blind on CTAF...but just because they flew from a non-towered field means nothing. I remember how difficult it was to train at a Class D airport, wishing that I could have made my early training hours easier at an un-towered field. Now I'm grateful for all the angst and mike-fright I went through and eventually overcame. I'm sure that working from a towered field from the get-go makes you more comfortable on the radio faster...but since one of these guys was a private pilot, he should have the proper radio skills and be able to operate in the vicinity of the ADIZ or he should tear up his ticket. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Arrow N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#10
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airman wrote:
The CNN pilot-reporter, Miles O'Brien, made a good point. These guys took off from an uncontrolled airfield, implying that they were not adept with ordinary ATC as would pilots be who were trained or who are resident at a Class D or C towered field. IMHO, this is a big assumption. Of course, coming from a CNN reporter, it figures as such. O'Brian has stated before on the air that he's a pilot. |
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