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#41
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![]() Chris G. wrote: I have placed a call to the local FSDO for the exact regulations governing this, but I speak from experience, having been a State SAR Coordinator backup for the State of Oregon a few years ago. FSDO is not the right place to call. Call your local TRACON or Center. |
#42
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![]() John Galban wrote: You'd better need to land at that controlled field pretty badly because you'll be busting the regs if you do that. Squawking 7600 doesn't relieve you of the requirement to establish two-way communictions prior to entering a class D. Oh please. That's crap. If you lose comm and squawk 7600 just fly right at the tower and look for the green light. Then land. |
#43
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![]() John Galban wrote: Jay Honeck wrote: snippage How would *you* have handled it? What I do when this happens is to stay on the freq. an wait until some airliner overhead talks to the controller (be it Center or Approach). Then I ask him to relay a msg. to the controller that I'm out of radio range and will squawk VFR. Wherever there's Center or Approach coverage, I'm usually within line of sight of an airliner overhead that is already talking to them. Nowadays make a call on 121.5. There's a million aircraft listening there these days. Some aircraft will hear you and relay the message. |
#44
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![]() Newps, Are you a Center controller? If so e-mail me off list I have a question wrDOTgiaconaATcoxDOTnet remove the big stuff |
#45
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Another suggestion was to call Champaign Approach and let them know what
was going on. If you were close to Rantoul you were in range of them. Scott Jay Honeck wrote: On the first leg of our flight to Washington, D.C., we only made it as far as Rantoul, Illinois, due to thunderstorms. We were utilizing VFR flight following, starting with Cedar Rapids Approach (CID)and being progressively handed off until we were talking to Chicago Center. As we approached Rantoul, we had to divert around a cell. At that point I told Center I needed to leave the frequency to check with Flight Watch, which was approved. While talking with Flight Watch (and getting the bad news that the weather was falling apart pretty much everywhere) we dropped down to 2500 feet, and then down to 2000 to get beneath a thickening layer of clouds. After completing our weather briefing, we switched back to Chicago's frequency, but were no longer able to communicate with Chicago Center. I heard them call me once, but they were unable to hear my response, probably because we were too low. We zigged and zagged a bit until we decided to throw in the towel and land for the night in Rantoul. I tried Chicago Center one more time, heard no response, and switched to Unicom and landed. After landing (and finding no one at the airport) we started fruitlessly calling cab companies (no answer) and hotels (no shuttle service). About the time we were going to walk to the nearest hotel (about a mile away) a car pulled around the corner with a flashing yellow light on top. It turned out to be the airport manager, who had been called at home by Chicago Center. They asked him to contact me, so he drove out to the airport and told me that "Center wants to talk to you." He was under the impression that I had not closed a flight plan, and was quite surprised when we told him that we didn't *have* a flight plan filed. Nevertheless, I called the number, spoke with the Head Cheese at Chicago Center, and told him what had happened. He fully understood the situation, and thanked me for calling. So what's going on here? Usually Chicago Center's version of "Flight Following" (if you can get it) is so casual, and so begrudgingly offered, that I hardly consider it to be of any service whatsoever -- yet on this particular flight they were tracking our progress all the way to the ground? In the end, it was a terrific turn of events, as the airport manager opened the FBO and got us the keys to a courtesy car, and then led us over to the hotel. (He even invited us to stop at a bar with him, which we declined...) Still, it's had us wondering ever since why Chicago Center was so concerned that they dispatched the airport manager to go looking for us. Were they just concerned with our well-being in the bad weather? Did our zigging and zagging -- and then dropping off their scopes -- look like a plane in distress? Did something get scrambled in their computers, making them believe that we had filed a flight plan? Is there an FAR requiring us to cancel flight following? Now that I think about it, I suppose we could have asked Flight Watch to notify Chicago Center when we could no longer hear them, but frankly it never dawned on me that Chicago really cared that much about what happened outside of their Class B airspace. How would *you* have handled it? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" -- -------------------- Scott F. Migaldi CP-ASEL-IA MI-150972 Join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/ -------------------- |
#46
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Are you a Center controller? If so e-mail me off list I have a question
Why not post it here? |
#47
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How? If they have to rely on primary radar alone, then how could they
reasonably be sure they were watching the plane they thought they were? |
#48
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![]() "John Clonts" wrote in message ups.com... Are you a Center controller? If so e-mail me off list I have a question Why not post it here? Because it is not a question I choose to ask online and would probably be of no interest to the group as a whole. |
#49
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Ben Hallert wrote:
How? If they have to rely on primary radar alone, then how could they reasonably be sure they were watching the plane they thought they were? If it's a slow day they'll give you vectors and watch to see whether their target turns. |
#50
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![]() I've had radar facilities chase me down after I've lost comms with them during VFR FF. They want to make sure they didn't lose you and something bad happened to you (like you crashed). Just consider it an extra service. It is a required service. If they lose you unexpectedly ATC is required to start a search. In Jay's case he was cruising merrily along, asked to switch to Flight Watch and then disappeared. Meanwhile Center is watching Jay descend and can't get a hold of him. Pretty soon he drops off radar. So call the most likely spot, the airport. If the manager wouldn't have found him then SAR would have been started. Thanks for the clarification. It's nice to know that the guys manning the Big Eye in the Sky are watching out for us more carefully than I previously believed. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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