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#1
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This weekend I was flying down to Ocean City NJ.... I was second in
pattern when someone came on the radio calling to the pilot on final approach. Pilot on final, Pilot on final....you have the wrong freq. We were flying, and didn't reply. He came on again, Pilot on Final you have the wrong freq.... And repeated. Apparently the "good samaritan" was thinking of Ocean City Md, which has a different Freq. I finally got on and TX that we are on the right Freq...... I have to admit, the whole thing was a bit distracting! My few seconds of being distracted by this was enough to affect my pattern alt. I understand the person was trying to be helpful but.....If the pilot has already made it to final, why keep on TX'g? I mean the pilot is on Final, let him/her concentrate on putting the plane down! The person Tx'g wasn't on the field, didn't see what was going on and was creating more of a situation than he was trying to help prevent. It was a good lesson for me to try and tune out nonesense and just fly the plane. I'm glad it was just a minor distraction like the radio and in the future I'll be better prepared for a distraction in pattern. So I guess I should say Thanks! Doug |
#2
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"gliderguynj" wrote in message
... I have to admit, the whole thing was a bit distracting! The first time I took my brother for a ride, I had about ten hours as a private pilot. As we were on final, he asked "What's that burning?". I asked if it was inside the plane or outside. When he said "Outside - over near the lake", my response was "I don't give a F*%& what it is right now". |
#3
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On Tue, 27 May 2008 10:15:57 -0700 (PDT), gliderguynj
wrote in : I understand the person was trying to be helpful but..... The FAA regulations and Advisory Circulars only mention broadcasting position on CTAF. There is no mention of communicating air-to-air. I know CTAF is being used for almost everything but that for which it is intended. But that doesn't make it okay. Personally, I limit my CTAF transmissions to announcing my position, and nothing else. |
#4
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On May 27, 1:15*pm, gliderguynj wrote:
This weekend I was flying down to Ocean City NJ.... *I was second in pattern when someone came on the radio calling to the pilot on final approach. *Pilot on final, Pilot on final....you have the wrong freq. We were flying, and didn't reply. *He came on again, Pilot on Final you have the wrong freq.... *And repeated. Apparently the "good samaritan" was thinking of Ocean City Md, which has a different Freq. *I finally got on and TX that we are on the right Freq...... I have to admit, the whole thing was a bit distracting! *My few seconds of being distracted by this was enough to affect my pattern alt. *I understand the person was trying to be helpful but.....If the pilot has already made it to final, why keep on TX'g? *I mean the pilot is on Final, let him/her concentrate on putting the plane down! The person Tx'g wasn't on the field, didn't see what was going on and was creating more of a situation than he was trying to help prevent. It was a good lesson for me to try and tune out nonesense and just fly the plane. *I'm glad it was just a minor distraction like the radio and in the future I'll be better prepared for a distraction in pattern. *So I guess I should say Thanks! Doug I love that airport . . . fly there often with my wife--short walk to the beach, showers at FBO when you get back to the airport . . . and a quick one hour flight home. |
#5
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If he's on the wrong freq.. how is he going to hear the call from the dumb
guy on the ground. BT "gliderguynj" wrote in message ... This weekend I was flying down to Ocean City NJ.... I was second in pattern when someone came on the radio calling to the pilot on final approach. Pilot on final, Pilot on final....you have the wrong freq. We were flying, and didn't reply. He came on again, Pilot on Final you have the wrong freq.... And repeated. Apparently the "good samaritan" was thinking of Ocean City Md, which has a different Freq. I finally got on and TX that we are on the right Freq...... I have to admit, the whole thing was a bit distracting! My few seconds of being distracted by this was enough to affect my pattern alt. I understand the person was trying to be helpful but.....If the pilot has already made it to final, why keep on TX'g? I mean the pilot is on Final, let him/her concentrate on putting the plane down! The person Tx'g wasn't on the field, didn't see what was going on and was creating more of a situation than he was trying to help prevent. It was a good lesson for me to try and tune out nonesense and just fly the plane. I'm glad it was just a minor distraction like the radio and in the future I'll be better prepared for a distraction in pattern. So I guess I should say Thanks! Doug |
#6
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On May 27, 2:34*pm, Larry Dighera wrote:
On Tue, 27 May 2008 10:15:57 -0700 (PDT), gliderguynj wrote in : I understand the person was trying to be helpful but..... The FAA regulations and Advisory Circulars only mention broadcasting position on CTAF. *There is no mention of communicating air-to-air. * I know CTAF is being used for almost everything but that for which it is intended. *But that doesn't make it okay. * Personally, I limit my CTAF transmissions to announcing my position, and nothing else. I'd agree. Particularly annoying are these clods running around with handheld radios - using them to keep track of each other, coordinate lunch, etc - nothing whatsoever to do with the safety of flight. Sometimes it's better to to turn the radio off than listen to the drivel. Dave |
#7
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Eventually you learn to ignore or deal with distractions like that.
I'll always remember a Young Eagle I gave a ride to in a J-3. I always asked if they wanted the "door" open or close...this young lad wanted it closed. That's fine, we take off, do the circuit, and I'm 30 seconds from touchdown. He must have been thinking the whole time about his decision because he chose then to yell "OK, you can open the door!" Not wishing to disappoint I reached over and flopped it down. That way he could brag to his friends how he flew in a plane with the door open. Another time I gave a Dad and his two sons a ride in a C-182, with the older son sitting in front. A 182 with full flaps on landing can point down at a good angle, and I guess it scared the kid because on final he started yelling "we're going to crash! we're going to crash!" I started looking around to see why...didn't occur to me later the nose-down attitude was the only reason. -- The world is divided into people who think they are right. ~ Unknown |
#8
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Personally, I limit my CTAF transmissions to announcing my position,
and nothing else. I'd agree. Particularly annoying are these clods running around with handheld radios - using them to keep track of each other, coordinate lunch, etc - nothing whatsoever to do with the safety of flight. Sometimes it's better to to turn the radio off than listen to the drivel. One of the only upsides of GA flying declining is that there is far less of that noise on the radio now. Personally, I'd like to suffer with the drivel again. I really like are the guys who announce that they're "over-flying the field at 4500 feet, heading West..." -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#9
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If he's on the wrong freq.. how is he going to hear the call from the dumb
guy on the ground. ROTFL! That's as dumb as the guys who -- in the presence of a stuck microphone clogging the frequency -- announce into the blue that "Someone's got a stuck mike -- check your mike!" -- as if the offender could hear them. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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On 2008-05-28, Jay Honeck wrote:
I really like are the guys who announce that they're "over-flying the field at 4500 feet, heading West..." I hadn't heard that until I started listening to the Fairmont CTAF. What's the point? -- Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net Fairmont, MN (FRM) (Yes, that's me!) AMD Zodiac CH601XLi N55ZC (ordered 17 March, delivery 10 June) |
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