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Roy Smith wrote:
wrote: : Why don't more people use flight following? The biggest reason I've heard (and feel often enough) is that you're likely to get "vectored" even if clear of controlled airspace. I've got a friend with a turbo Arrow that flies along VFR without flight following right over the top of Class C and Class B at 10500 or 11500. If you were to call up approach while doing, that, seems like 9 times out of 10 they'll vector you 10-20 miles out of the way. Similarly if you're skirting under an airspace... likely to get vectored further out. There's two sides to this. One is that if you're VFR in Class E airspace, they really don't have any authority to vector you (I'm sure somebody will come up with some exception). Sometimes controllers do try to do so anyway, but if you really don't want to comply, you can just say "cancel flight following, request frequency change" and go on your fat, dumb, and happy way. The other is that if you're doing something like skirting the top of a Class B by 500 feet and the controller suggests a heading or route to you, it might just be in both of your best interests to go along with it. You scratch his back and he'll scratch yours. There's a lot of heavy metal climbing out the top of a Class B. I don't want to be the hood ornament on a 747, nor do I want to discover what the wake turbulence of one feels like. Yes. I've gone over the top of Chicago twice on the way to OSH. You know you can't get an IFR routing anywhere near there, so I crossed the CBAS at 10500 VFR. I was happy to have advisories as the aluminum concentration was high. The controller seemed to be glad I was talking and squawking, too. He did give me a couple of zigzags, but that's better than going way out over Lake Michigan or 50 miles to the west. |
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