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#61
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
Robert Briggs wrote: Steven P. McNicoll wrote: Robert Briggs wrote: Er, that's what I was saying. No, you said "the other guy's runway doesn't include 150 feet or so of your own". Er, what I wrote was: "... why bother holding short if the other guy's runway doesn't include 150 feet or so of your own?" See the "why bother ... if ..." construct? Yes, I saw it the first time. The part you still don't understand is that the other guy's runway DOES include 150 feet or so of your own. You can't use that portion of the runway because someone else is using it. Hmm ... I think I *do* understand that: you land and hold short of that 150-foot portion (more specifically, short of some marked holding point). I guess that at least one of us needs a caffeine fix and/or a weekend away from the 'puter. Good night. |
#62
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Newps wrote:
I worked for four years at an airport where 95% of the traffic was from the University of North Dakota. Nothing but flight training. Students beat the hell out of airplanes and I don't recall any flat tires on the trainers. The flats all seem to happen to the biz jets and big twins. Interesting. Well, it happened to me once. [Yes, it was in a 172 also used for training.] But this is all beside the point (although interesting). The fact is that controllers do occasionally have to wave off an aircraft previously cleared for landing. At GFK we had probably 50 go arounds a day for any number of reasons. However disabled aircraft on the runway wasn't one of the top 10 factors. Here at BIL we have hardly any flight training anymore and I can't remember the last time I saw a go around. Although there are a few reasons for that too. That *is* interesting. It helps explain why I've experienced this more at CDW than elsewhere. I thought it because most of my landings, over the years, have been there (it's where I did my primary and instrument training). But CDW is also a "training heavy" airport. Not that this is too meaningful, but I cannot recall a single instance of a go-around being required at a controlled airport not CDW. I can recall hearing a go-around issued at CDW just this past week. - Andrew |
#63
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![]() "Robert Briggs" wrote in message ... Hmm ... I think I *do* understand that: you land and hold short of that 150-foot portion (more specifically, short of some marked holding point). Well, if you understood that, why did you ask "... why bother holding short if the other guy's runway doesn't include 150 feet or so of your own?"? I guess that at least one of us needs a caffeine fix and/or a weekend away from the 'puter. Good night. I think you're right. I suggest rest. |
#64
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![]() Andrew Gideon wrote: That's not the same thing as saying that it cannot occur, though. Fer cryin' out loud, of course anything can happen. And yet we still allow planes to takeoff. If we did have a wreck caused by such an unfortunate and unlikely event, would the rules be changed? Probably, because that's how the FAA works. Controller forgets Metroliner on runway at an intersection at night, clears 737 to land, which promptly lands on Metroliner. As a direct result I am no longer allowed to put aircraft in postion at an intersection at night. If so, why wait? Because it's reasonable to wait. |
#65
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![]() Andrew Gideon wrote: **** happens. I forgot that reason: animal incursion (and activities {8^) on the runway. Yep, a few weeks ago aHorizon Dash 8 told me "Tower, we just hit something on the runway." We send the truck out onto the runway and they needed a shovel to pick up the remains of some animal. It wasn't until the Horizon pilot checked his nosewheel and found a few hundred quills stuck in the tire did we realize it was a porcupine. |
#66
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 15:02:09 -0400, Andrew Gideon
wrote: Not that this is too meaningful, but I cannot recall a single instance of a go-around being required at a controlled airport not CDW. I can recall hearing a go-around issued at CDW just this past week. FWIW, I've been told to go-around while attempting to get in a landing at BED on any number of occasions during my training here. |
#67
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Peter Clark wrote:
FWIW, I've been told to go-around while attempting to get in a landing at BED on any number of occasions during my training here. Is that a training-heavy airport? - Andrew |
#68
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Og course. He was trundling down the runway. That was the first you saw of him? What difference does that make? I suspect you're playing your usual one sentence post game that ends in something like "well, we do that, but that's not the proper term for that here." If so, finish it up, 'cause you're on record so far as saying that, if the runway gets blocked by one aircraft, no U.S. controller would cancel the landing clearance of a following aircraft, and that's BS. Been there. Pertinent quote: When a number of independent aircraft (i.e., excluding formation teams and the like) wish to land in quick succession, AIUI only one will be "cleared to land" at any time in the UK, so if a landing aeroplane doesn't clear the runway in time then the guy behind who has not been "cleared to land" will be going around anyway. In the US, controllers would sequence the arriving aircraft so that a go around would not be necessary. George Patterson If you want to know God's opinion of money, just look at the people he gives it to. |
#69
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 17:55:51 -0400, Andrew Gideon
wrote: Peter Clark wrote: FWIW, I've been told to go-around while attempting to get in a landing at BED on any number of occasions during my training here. Is that a training-heavy airport? Yes, at least 2 schools based there. I believe they do a lot of controller training as well. Makes for an exciting pattern towards the end of the scheduled blocks when everyone is coming back from the practice areas ![]() |
#70
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Peter Clark wrote in message . ..
Yes, at least 2 schools based there. I believe they do a lot of controller training as well. Makes for an exciting pattern towards the end of the scheduled blocks when everyone is coming back from the practice areas ![]() BED gets even more interesting when you add in the heavy bizjet traffic. You can easily have a handful of Katanas and Tomahawks sharing the pattern with Challengers and G-Vs. Also you need to keep your eyes peeled out by the "golf ball" off to the Northeast, and the old Wang Towers. I always make a point of not passing directly overhead of either one. -cwk. |
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