Class B airspace notation
On Dec 17, 2:27 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
writes:
What is the practical difference between "above, but not
including" (e.g., +12) and "above and including" (e.g., 12)?
I think it serves when you have two airspaces with no margin between them.
For exampple, one is 12/SFC, the other is 70/12+. So at 1200 feet you're in
one airspace, and at 1201 feet, you're in the other. If they were specified
as 11/SFC and 70/12, the space between 1101 feet and 1199 feet inclusive would
be outside either airspace.
You need to understand the vertical relationship between airspaces.
Have a look at a sectional and think about it. Why would you choose to
fly on the vertical limit between to airspsaces anyway?
Cheers
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