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#41
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... I presumed nothing, other than that I was cleared to land. When the controller revoked that clearance (by inadvertently misjudging the spacing between aircraft) I went around -- simple as that. Previously you said the spacing was good and the controller initiated the go around when the 172 unexpectedly stopped on the runway. Now you say the spacing was poor and you chose to go around. Which is it? I believe you were formerly in the newspaper business. Were you forced out of that career by an inability to keep a story straight? |
#42
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"Tim" wrote in message
... I have been to many fine class D airports. I would take most over the uncontrolled fields I have been. Cowboys for sure at the uncontrolled airport near me. I was put on a waiting list at KFRG - glad I decided to skip that. It is too busy - busier than the class c near here and the controllers are rude. Then went to KHWV - that is a dangerous place to fly - non-towered - insane amounts of scary piloting there and I am finally at KISP - class C. I like it. Very professional people. Itis nice to have radar services as the default and good for IFR flights instead of going non towered. I agree about KFRG, the controllers are regulars at being jerks, I think mostly because they are underqualified for what they have to deal with. I was put in a hold over the bridge near the shore for 30 minutes with 10 other planes all looking to not crash into each other. I was glad for the TIS-A that day. Finally I headed north and called up from the northeast where I was promptly let into the pattern. I trained and was based at KHPN and they have more traffic and a more difficult mix what with students, spamcans, corporates and commuter airliners. They rarely got surly and were much more accomodating. Perhaps KFRG needs NY Approach to assign a squawk and sequence arrivals like they do for KHPN. KISP was always a joy to fly into. Much sleepier than KFRG. |
#43
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... A tower controller has NEVER been killed because of their screw up. It is always the pilot who bites the dust. When I stated a 360 for spacing was my first choice I never said I wasn't going to make a radio report to the tower, in fact That has happened to me before and as I started my 360 the tower was notified by me, it is then up to them to fix the mess they created. Yup, just as it's up to them to fix the messes pilots create. I am going home alive, **** on the incompetent tower controller who stuffed a plane right in front of me after I was cleared to land. Was spacing a problem? Funny ol Steven P. Mc Nicoll threw in the side line of tower operators not making enough money, and there will be a shortage of them because of it. One day he might even admit a controller actually made a mistake and a pilot fixed it and lived to fly again. Me? Admit a controller made a mistake? I'm as likely to do that as you are to admit a pilot made a mistake. I have to admit he can quote all the rules and seems up to speed on traffic flows and probably was a great controller before he became mighter then the rest of us. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! He still is. |
#44
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... Face it, the controller should have had the 172 follow me in. He misjudged the spacing. (He didn't have a GPS either... :-) No, but he may very well have had radar. Mizzou approach's ASR is about 7 miles north of JEF. With a BRITE scope in the tower the controller would be in a far better position to judge spacing than you were. (And we've already established how well you can judge spacing, even with GPS... :-) |
#45
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TheSmokingGnu wrote:
You'll get lots of people that, for example, won't depart the pattern on the downwind (nearly had a from-behind midair with someone in an experimental twice my speed because he thought he could depart via the upwind), What's wrong with departing via the upwind? .... Alan -- Alan Gerber PP-ASEL gerber AT panix DOT com |
#46
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Alan Gerber wrote:
What's wrong with departing via the upwind? I think you'd find it exceedingly difficult to do so when you must fly _through_ the gentleman in front of you. ![]() The pilot in question had previously been practicing closed traffic, and only announced that he was departing (but not in what direction); the "standard" departure for the airport would have been a crosswind. Even more distressing was the fact that he didn't divert properly around the obviously slower traffic (that is, to the right; he kept on his departure vector), and was either oblivious or didn't care about giving or listening to position reports. But whadda ya gonna do? Kick the ball, fly around George, kick the ball... TheSmokingGnu |
#47
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... That's why I contend that Class D stands for "D'oh!", and is the most dangerous airspace in America. I'll take an uncontrolled airport over non-radar Class D, any day of the week. Why would the presence of a control tower render airspace unsafe? |
#48
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... Class Delta can be MUCH worse than "uncontrolled", in my experience, because: a) You've got a guy in the tower with binoculars trying to see and control too many things going on. What things is the guy in the tower trying to see and control? b) You've got too many pilots reporting "5 north of the field" when they are *really* 5 EAST of the field (for example), making it impossible for our hapless binocular-equipped controller to keep track of traffic effectively. So it's pilots that make Class D unsafe? |
#49
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![]() "TheSmokingGnu" wrote in message ... In non-radar D, very much so. You have to be on the ball all the time and be sure to make precise radio calls. Precise radio calls are a rarity. Contrariwise, uncontrolled space can be a zoo, with a high traffic density, and weekend warriors that don't (or won't) follow proper procedure, in the cockpit or on the radio. You'll get lots of people that, for example, won't depart the pattern on the downwind (nearly had a from-behind midair with someone in an experimental twice my speed because he thought he could depart via the upwind), or omitting initial position calls, calls to final, calls clear of runway, omitting the ident, etc. etc. etc. Add in some jet traffic along with the standard piston assortment, and things can get ugly, really fast. Part 91 specifies direction of turns for arriving aircraft, but not for departing aircraft. The AIM states; "If departing the traffic pattern, continue straight out, or exit with a 45 degree turn (to the left when in a left?hand traffic pattern; to the right when in a right?hand traffic pattern) beyond the departure end of the runway, after reaching pattern altitude." Things like that probably lead people to believe departing via the upwind is entirely proper. |
#50
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![]() "TheSmokingGnu" wrote in message ... The pilot in question had previously been practicing closed traffic, and only announced that he was departing (but not in what direction); the "standard" departure for the airport would have been a crosswind. What airport is that and what makes crosswind the "standard" departure? |
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