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#11
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On Jun 28, 8:33 pm, "Aluckyguess" wrote:
The controller getting upset doesn't do any good. That just makes a bad situation worse. You either take the time or you tell him to shut the thing down. Nobody needs to get upset. I hate it when controllers act all ****y. I was flying through the palm springs tursa one day and ATC was getting all over this guy in a helicopter. The guy didn't speak good English and was getting more and more confused as the guy yelled at him. I almost asked for his number so I could call him and remind him what his job was. His job is to make sure everyone is safe not panic some new pilot into running into the side of a mountain. After he gets the situation under control he can tell the pilot to call and yell at him without the whole world listening. I didn't think the controller was all that ****y for one, and he was trying his best to make sure that the comm was correctly interpreted and complied with which is his job. JFK is one of the busiest airports in the world, and pilots flying there should be professional and competent, which includes being able to speak and understand basic english. The Air China pilot certainly didn't meet the english requirement. |
#12
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On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 19:33:05 -0700, "Aluckyguess" wrote in
: The controller getting upset doesn't do any good. That just makes a bad situation worse. You either take the time or you tell him to shut the thing down. Nobody needs to get upset. I hate it when controllers act all ****y. It reveals the controller's fear of losing control of his sector of responsibility. I was flying through the palm springs tursa one day and ATC was getting all over this guy in a helicopter. My experience with the KPSP TRSA personnel has been disappointing. They seem inexperienced, to nonchalant about actually doing their job, but ready to vector you hither and yawn to make room for the heavier iron. I'm often tempted to tell them, "Negative stage three." I heard a rumor that KPSP TRSA operation is being reassigned to a military facility, IIRC. The guy didn't speak good English and was getting more and more confused as the guy yelled at him. I almost asked for his number so I could call him and remind him what his job was. His job is to make sure everyone is safe not panic some new pilot into running into the side of a mountain. I believe KPSP ATC was responsible for a Lear impacting Mt. San Gregornio several years ago, because they forgot to issue a turn after departure one night. After he gets the situation under control he can tell the pilot to call and yell at him without the whole world listening. Right. It's like the controllers' personalities are paramount, and the smooth conduct of aircraft through their airspace is secondary sometimes. |
#13
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Yeah...but they should also train the controllers on how to ditch
their various accents themselves, slow down a bit, and deal with ESL pilots. The burden can't be 100% on the pilots to understand controllers. -- "I would love to change the world, but they won't give me the source code" |
#14
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"Aluckyguess" :
The guy didn't speak good English and was getting more and more confused as the guy yelled at him. I almost asked for his number so I could call him and remind him what his job was. His job is to make sure everyone is safe not panic some new pilot into running into the side of a mountain. And he might have reminded you what his job is not ... there isn't supposed to be a language barrier there -- the reg specifies being able to read, speak, write *and understand* English. Sorry, but I tend to side with the ATC when a person's English is the source of the confusion/problem. |
#15
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![]() "Dallas" wrote in message ... Scary. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWDEIvjwaFU Bad situation but I was amused that the person who produced the video felt it necessary to provide subtitles for the ATC as well. |
#16
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Aluckyguess writes:
The controller getting upset doesn't do any good. That just makes a bad situation worse. Given the workload of the controller and the potential risks, I think he did very well. You either take the time or you tell him to shut the thing down. It's unlikely the pilot would shut down; that would be a tremendous loss of face. It's also unlikely that any amount of explanation would allow a person who cannot understand English to suddenly start understanding it. Nobody needs to get upset. I hate it when controllers act all ****y. I was flying through the palm springs tursa one day and ATC was getting all over this guy in a helicopter. The guy didn't speak good English and was getting more and more confused as the guy yelled at him. I almost asked for his number so I could call him and remind him what his job was. The pilot, or the controller? If the pilot can't understand English, he needs to stay on the ground. His job is to make sure everyone is safe not panic some new pilot into running into the side of a mountain. A pilot who cannot understand English is not safe, and should never have left the ground. By the time the controller talks to him, the flight is _already_ unsafe, because it's in the air with a pilot who cannot speak English. |
#17
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Bob Fry writes:
Yeah...but they should also train the controllers on how to ditch their various accents themselves, slow down a bit, and deal with ESL pilots. The burden can't be 100% on the pilots to understand controllers. False. This controller spoke very clearly; his accent was completely unimportant. The pilot's English was horrible, and completely unacceptable. All of the fault rests with the pilot. You cannot "deal with" pilots who cannot speak English. There is nothing you can do to make a person understand your language if he cannot understand it. This pilot's English was so poor that no action the controller might take, and no English accent he might have used, would have sufficed to allow communication. The pilot was simply incompetent in English. |
#18
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Richard writes:
Bad situation but I was amused that the person who produced the video felt it necessary to provide subtitles for the ATC as well. Maybe it was just for the sake of consistency or political correctness. Radio communication is often hard to understand for the uninitiated. Even experienced users often make mistakes, unfortunately. |
#19
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On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 01:44:22 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote: Granted the controller was speaking normally as he would to someone who understood English. I often have trouble understanding controllers. I often suspect that they try to mumble, on the theory that if the pilot doesn't know what's going on, then he's not much of a pilot. "My speech is more abbreviated and monotonal than your speech, so there!" My most frequent requestt to ATC is "Say again" which is pretty abbreviated and monotonal itself. So there! (See my post on Air Force One at Pease. THAT controller spoke clearly, you bet!) Blue skies! -- Dan Ford Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942 forthcoming from HarperCollins www.flyingtigersbook.com |
#20
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On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 08:58:53 +0200, Mxsmanic
wrote: This controller spoke very clearly; his accent was completely unimportant. Spoken like a true monophone American! Accents are VERY important. You might try landing at Liverpool with a controller speaking clearly in a Liverpudlian accent. You wouldn't have a clue what he was saying. It's not enough to speak clearly. The controller should speak a standard English, like that used by network announcers and news readers. That said, there is a particular problem understanding Asians speaking English that they learned in secondary school or later. Though they were taught a standard English, either American or British, and though they may be entirely fluent, it can be very hard indeed to understand everything they say. I wrote a recommendation for a graduate student applying to Harvard for a PhD program. I had no doubt whatever that she could handle the work with ease, but I had to admit that I was sometimes mystified by her speech. ("Wolf" for example. She pronounced it with a long O, and it became another word entirely.) Blue skies! -- Dan Ford Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942 forthcoming from HarperCollins www.flyingtigersbook.com |
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