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  #11  
Old June 9th 04, 08:10 PM
Peter Duniho
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
nk.net...
Can you post a link to the chart? Is that the only example you have?


In a matter of minutes, I found two references to VFR charts published for
the Salt Lake City Olympic Games held in 2002:

http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...01-4-199x.html
http://www.eaa72.org/news/2001/dec01news.pdf

I didn't waste my time looking for references to the Atlanta charts that
were similarly published, but they are out there if you ever decide to see
for yourself.

Do you still maintain that TFRs being published implies that there is no
plan to eliminate them?

Pete


  #12  
Old June 9th 04, 08:15 PM
Steven P. McNicoll
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
...

Do you still maintain that TFRs being published implies that there is no
plan to eliminate them?


Of course.


  #13  
Old June 9th 04, 08:21 PM
Peter Duniho
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
nk.net...
[...]
What I stated was simple logic. These "temporary" restrictions have been

in
place, uncharted, for years. They're being charted because they're being
made permanent.


It appears that your understanding of "simple logic" is flawed.

Where are the verified facts, along with the proveable conclusions? Your
so-called "simple logic" is nothing more than a personal assumption on your
part.

Here are the facts that we know:

* The TFRs have existed for nearly three years
* They have been left uncharted for nearly that whole time
* The latest chart revision includes the TFRs

For "simple logic" to conclude that the TFRs are being made permanent, you'd
have to have some proved theorem that says something like "a TFR that has
been present and left uncharted for an extraordinarily long time, and that
is then charted will be made permanent".

So far, the only source I see for such a "theorem" is your own personal
belief. There's nothing in the FARs or charting policies that would support
it. A "theorem" that is simply based on your own personal belief is not a
theorem, it's a hypothesis. A hypothesis is useless for the purpose of
proving something using "simple logic".

AOPA has been lobbying for a long time now for the airspace to be charted,
as have numerous other folks. The TFRs should always have been charted,
given the long-lasting nature of them, and the fact that they are charting
them now may well reflect nothing more than recognition of that common sense
assertion.

Regardless of why the TFRs are being charted, there's no valid way to come
to a logical conclusion that they are being made permanent. And in fact,
since there's precedent for charting TFRs, and since they could just as
easily have made them permanent and charted them that way, there's reason to
believe that for now, there's no intent to make them permanent.

Pete


  #14  
Old June 10th 04, 01:21 PM
Richard Russell
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On Wed, 09 Jun 2004 19:15:45 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote:


"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
...

Do you still maintain that TFRs being published implies that there is no
plan to eliminate them?


Of course.



This doesn't qualify as undisputable truth, but it does have some
bearing on the subject. Some months ago, I attended an FAA sponsored
seminar at Willow Grove Joint Reserve Base. The speaker was a
high-ranking NACO official who was directly in charge of the charting
efforts as well as the A/FD publication. I'm sorry, I do not recall
his name. He discussed, in some length, the charting of the
Washington ADIZ and specifically noted that the fact that it was
charted did not in any way imply permanence. He did note, however,
that they probably would not have charted it if they anticipated a
change in the near future. The primary purpose for the charting was
to help pilots avoid the ADIZ.

Rich Russell
  #15  
Old June 10th 04, 06:37 PM
Dylan Smith
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In article , Peter Duniho wrote:
Do you still maintain that TFRs being published implies that there is no
plan to eliminate them?


Personally, I don't know - but I think they should quit pussyfooting
around and either get rid of the TFRs or change them to
restricted/prohibited areas.

--
Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man
Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net
Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net
"Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee"
  #18  
Old June 11th 04, 06:51 PM
Teacherjh
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I don't really know what "freedom" we will have gained by
being able to fly over a nuclear power station


The freedom to fly without having to find out where the danged things are. The
freedom to take pictures of them (and of things near them) without being shot
down. The freedom do to many things that most people are not interested in
doing, which is what true freedom is all about.

Jose

--
(for Email, make the obvious changes in my address)
  #19  
Old June 14th 04, 05:28 PM
David Brooks
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"kage" wrote in message
...
The new Seattle sectional and terminal chart have the TFR's mapped. I

guess
they are here to stay.


Putting aside the thread about whether they are really temporary or not,
what about the depiction itself? They show:
- Land areas white (i.e. no elevation information, but that's not a problem
in these cases)
- In the larger ones (where there is room for it), a thick blue dash outline
- A small notation pointing to the TFR.

Without the notation, they'd be easy to miss. Is that depiction standard for
TFRs, or did NACO just make them up? I don't see a reference in my copy of
the VFR Symbols Guide.

-- David Brooks


  #20  
Old June 17th 04, 10:18 PM
kage
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I don't have the sectional here with me, in Roskilde. But I think the
altitudes are NOT depicted as well.

Karl

"David Brooks" wrote in message
...
"kage" wrote in message
...
The new Seattle sectional and terminal chart have the TFR's mapped. I

guess
they are here to stay.


Putting aside the thread about whether they are really temporary or not,
what about the depiction itself? They show:
- Land areas white (i.e. no elevation information, but that's not a

problem
in these cases)
- In the larger ones (where there is room for it), a thick blue dash

outline
- A small notation pointing to the TFR.

Without the notation, they'd be easy to miss. Is that depiction standard

for
TFRs, or did NACO just make them up? I don't see a reference in my copy of
the VFR Symbols Guide.

-- David Brooks




 




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