![]() |
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 |
#111
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message news ![]() Regarding the difference between 2. and 3.: When would "procedures require application of IFR separation to VFR aircraft practicing instrument approaches" as opposed to "Where separation services are not provided to VFR aircraft practicing instrument approaches"? It is FAA policy that IFR separation should be provided to VFR aircraft practicing instrument approaches wherever it can be provided. Where it is done a letter to airmen is issued advising the users of those airports where standard separation is provided for VFR aircraft conducting practice instrument approaches. Why this policy was set is beyond me. |
#112
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Christopher C. Stacy" wrote in message ... Yes. The question at hand is how the pilot and controller understand whether the instrument procedure is being flown under IFR or VFR. My belief is that if you receive and accept a clearance like: "Cherokee 123 SQUAWK 5432, fly heading 090; CLEARED TO the Foobar airport ILS 23 APPROACH via Init MAINTAIN 2000 UNTIL established on the localizer." that you are have accepted an IFR clearance. This phraseology is exactly the same instruction that you would be given near the end your flight on an IFR flight plan. No it isn't. The clearance limit is issued at the beginning of the flight, not at the end. |
#113
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Christopher C. Stacy" wrote in message ... I agree that was written sloppily. In the one case, you get the "cleared to" the airport earlier in the flight and the "cleared for the approach" afterwards. In the othe case, you usually get directed to some IAP or just radar vectored to the approach course followed by "cleared for the approach". In the example that the Boston TRACON supervisor commented on, what I said to him was the "cleared for..." version. He said that this absent the "Maintain VFR" phrase, this constituted a clearance limit for the purpose of IFR lost comm procedures (which I hadn't asked about). You could argue that he is wrong, of course. If he said that, he's wrong. A clearance limit is defined as the point to which an aircraft is cleared when issued a clearance and is a necessary component of an IFR clearance. No "cleared to", no clearance limit, no IFR clearance. |
#114
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "skym" wrote in message ups.com... Uh, I really hope all you ATC guys are "sharp troopers." You're scaring me. Some are, some are not. |
#115
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Christopher C. Stacy" wrote in message ... The last time I asked an operational supervisor at the FAA (Boston), which was yesterday, he said that in this (VFR) case the lack of the phrase "MAINTAIN VFR" indicates they believe you are accepting an IFR clearance with the airport as the clearance limit (unless you were previously on an IFR clearance as you describe above). I specifically asked him if there was a clearance limit, and what it would be. He also went on to tell me about what he expected the lost communications procedures would be. This was without having said "CLEARED TO airport". That is the point of contention. He's wrong. |
#116
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
"Christopher C. Stacy" wrote in message ... Yes. The question at hand is how the pilot and controller understand whether the instrument procedure is being flown under IFR or VFR. My belief is that if you receive and accept a clearance like: "Cherokee 123 SQUAWK 5432, fly heading 090; CLEARED TO the Foobar airport ILS 23 APPROACH via Init MAINTAIN 2000 UNTIL established on the localizer." that you are have accepted an IFR clearance. This phraseology is exactly the same instruction that you would be given near the end your flight on an IFR flight plan. No it isn't. The clearance limit is issued at the beginning of the flight, not at the end. And it is issued at the beginning of the clearance as well. :-) Matt |
#117
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Jose wrote: SoCal, into STS? SoCal, NoCal, LoCal, it's all the same to me. ![]() Just don't call NorCal "Bay Approach" as I absent-mindedly did last Wednesday :-). Hamish (maybe that's why they made me cancel...) |
#118
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Hamish Reid wrote: Just don't call NorCal "Bay Approach" as I absent-mindedly did last Wednesday :-). Hamish (maybe that's why they made me cancel...) Or Sierra Approach. How long did that name last? I think by the time it made it on to the VFR chart, they'd changed it to NoCal. John -- John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/ |
#119
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#120
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Hamish Reid wrote: I think I got about half a dozen or so flights with Sierra. Shame really, I liked the name -- "NorCal" is kinda graceless by comparison... Hamish Yeah, the controllers liked that name, too. But decided it was a bad idea for their callsign to be a word from the phonetic alphabet, so it was changed. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Air Force One Had to Intercept Some Inadvertent Flyers / How? | Rick Umali | Piloting | 29 | February 15th 06 04:40 AM |
What was controller implying?? | Bill J | Instrument Flight Rules | 65 | September 28th 04 12:32 AM |
Columns by a Canadian centre controller | David Megginson | Instrument Flight Rules | 1 | August 9th 04 10:05 PM |
Skyguide traffic controller killed | HECTOP | Piloting | 39 | March 3rd 04 01:46 AM |
AmeriFlight Crash | C J Campbell | Piloting | 5 | December 1st 03 02:13 PM |