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#11
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![]() A Lieberma wrote: My question is where were you in relationship to the airport? Were you under an approach or departure path? Where you near an initial approach fix for IFR traffic? Irrelavant. He was below the class C which puts him well away from traffic at those points. |
#12
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#13
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#14
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#15
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#16
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Dave Butler wrote:
: If you really meant to ask "where are the regs?" I don't think you'll : find anything specifically about flight following in the regulations. : Look for "VFR advisories" in the AIM. That's the official name for what : we informally call flight-following. : I think Steven said it best (paraphrasing): don't ask, just tell them : you're terminating radar services. : Dave Pretty much what I was doing (I thought). I think that that point he realized that I was *trying* to be a nice guy by talking to him and acknowledging altitude, etc, but yet I wasn't willing to accept vectors. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#17
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: I'm not actually sure that teh controllers know the specific boundaries
: of the airspace. When you get vectored around its usually because they : have arrivals/departures, not because of the airspace. I sure hope that's not the case. Normal (IFR) arrivals/departures should stay within the boundaries of the controlled airspace... that's why they're there. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#18
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![]() wrote in message ... Pretty much what I was doing (I thought). I think that that point he realized that I was *trying* to be a nice guy by talking to him and acknowledging altitude, etc, but yet I wasn't willing to accept vectors. Class C services include separation between IFR and VFR aircraft, they are provided to all aircraft within Class C airspace, and to all participating aircraft within the outer area. When you contacted approach you became a participating aircraft. If vectors are deemed necessary to provide separation you will receive vectors. If you're not willing to accept them don't be a participating aircraft. |
#19
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: Class C services include separation between IFR and VFR aircraft, they are
: provided to all aircraft within Class C airspace, and to all participating : aircraft within the outer area. When you contacted approach you became a : participating aircraft. If vectors are deemed necessary to provide : separation you will receive vectors. If you're not willing to accept them : don't be a participating aircraft. Ah... there's the rub though. I was not, nor did I plan to actually enter the Class C. I am certainly not advocating disregarding ATC requests when in the controlled airspace. I'm arguing against the seemingly mandatory re-routing of VFR traffic completely around the lateral boundaries of a Class C should the VFR traffic want to cooperate with ATC by communicating with them. I suspect you have it pretty much summarized though. Sad that the only "solution" to this is just squawk 1200 and buzz through fat, dumb, and happy. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#20
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![]() wrote in message ... : Class C services include separation between IFR and VFR aircraft, they are : provided to all aircraft within Class C airspace, and to all participating : aircraft within the outer area. When you contacted approach you became a : participating aircraft. If vectors are deemed necessary to provide : separation you will receive vectors. If you're not willing to accept them : don't be a participating aircraft. Ah... there's the rub though. I was not, nor did I plan to actually enter the Class C. I am certainly not advocating disregarding ATC requests when in the controlled airspace. I'm arguing against the seemingly mandatory re-routing of VFR traffic completely around the lateral boundaries of a Class C should the VFR traffic want to cooperate with ATC by communicating with them. I suspect you have it pretty much summarized though. Sad that the only "solution" to this is just squawk 1200 and buzz through fat, dumb, and happy. I don't think you understand. Class C services are provided to all aircraft within the Class C airspace itself, and to all participating aircraft in the outer area associated with it. The outer area is not marked on the chart, it is normally the area within a twenty mile radius of the Class C primary airport and extends from the lower limits of radar/radio coverage up to the ceiling of the approach control's delegated airspace excluding the Class C charted area. |
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