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#1
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![]() Last week I was in Greenland, at Narsarsuaq, formerly the USAAF and USAF airfield Bluie West One. It's a fabulous place, but one aspect of the Narsarsuaq airfield really astonished me. There is a tower, six days a week during normal daylight hours, but the tower only gives advice; the pilot is always in control, and makes his own decisions. Is this very unusual? -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#2
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... snipped... There is a tower, six days a week during normal daylight hours, but the tower only gives advice; the pilot is always in control, and makes his own decisions. Isn't the pilot always in control and have final authority at all towered airports? |
#3
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![]() "Brad Zeigler" wrote in message ... Isn't the pilot always in control and have final authority at all towered airports? That wouldn't work very well. You could have a pilot using his final authority to land on runway 18 while another pilot is using his final authority to land on runway 36. |
#4
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "Brad Zeigler" wrote in message ... Isn't the pilot always in control and have final authority at all towered airports? That wouldn't work very well. You could have a pilot using his final authority to land on runway 18 while another pilot is using his final authority to land on runway 36. Have you never flown into a non-towered airport? |
#5
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Cub Driver wrote:
Last week I was in Greenland, at Narsarsuaq, formerly the USAAF and USAF airfield Bluie West One. It's a fabulous place, but one aspect of the Narsarsuaq airfield really astonished me. There is a tower, six days a week during normal daylight hours, but the tower only gives advice; the pilot is always in control, and makes his own decisions. Is this very unusual? It seems that you have met AFIS - Aerodrome Flight Information Service. The guy in the tower is not a qualified ATC controller, but he's able to provide the minimum information needed for night or IFR operations. AFAIK, AFIS is in use on smaller European airports. -- Tauno Voipio (Piper Turbo Arrow IV at EFHF) tauno voipio (at) iki fi |
#6
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![]() "Brad Zeigler" wrote in message ... Have you never flown into a non-towered airport? Many times. Why? |
#7
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Tauno Voipio wrote:
AFAIK, AFIS is in use on smaller European airports. Pretty common here. What looks like a tower isn't a "tower" in the technical sense. Look at the chart: You most probably won't find a "tower" frequency but rather an "info" or "AFIS" frequency. Stefan |
#9
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Used to have similar FSS stations at many airports here in the US. I
remeber one day approaching an airport from a ways out and having the FSS give me a blow-by-blow (excuse the pun) account as a thunderstorm approached the airport from the other direction. Not a controller, but very helpful. I lost the race and landed elsewhere. -- Gene Seibel Tales of Flight - http://pad39a.com/gene/tales.html Because I fly, I envy no one. |
#10
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Paul Tomblin wrote:
Several Canadian airports I've been at have a FSS on the field. Their facility looks like a tower cab, but not up on a tower, and they are the ones you talk to (you say "St. Catherines Radio" instead of "St. Catherines Traffic" or they get upset with you), but they tell you the wind an altimeter settings, tell you if anybody else is in the pattern, but they don't clear you for anything. I was thinking that originally, but then another poster reminded me that Denmark owns Greenland, hence the European comparison. |
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