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Last Monday (16 Aug 2004) I was on an IFR flight from Oakland, CA to Ogden,
UT. About thirty minutes from Ogden, I heard Salt Lake Center call a Lifeguard flight and clear him direct to (what sounded like) widow. The pilot asked for spelling and Center said Whiskey, India, Delta, Oscar, Echo. There was a pause of a few seconds and the Lifeguard pilot repeated the spelling for confirmation. He had it right. He said he couldn't find it in his database and asked if it was on the Low Altitude chart. The controller, a bit peeved by now, said it was. I couldn't find it on my Jepp chart or in my Garmin 296's database, which I'd just updated -- from Jepp, of course. I called Center and said I couldn't find WIDOE on my GPS either. "Roger," he said. Today, still curious about this intersection, I called Denver FSS and asked about it. The briefer found it immediately and said it was at 41 13 by 112 46 -- definitely in Utah. My chart and my GPS is blank in that area. I went to www.arnav.com and looked up WIDOE. I immediately found it. The entry says it's on the "MILITARY IAP" chart and its use is "Military reporting." Why would the Salt Lake Center controller give a civilian pilot a military fix and why wouldn't the controller know it wasn't on the low altitude chart? Are military fixes not distinguished from civilian fixes on his scope? Is this intersection on the government's low altitude chart? Are any military fixes in the Jepp database? Has anyone else been cleared to a military fix? Do I ask too many questions? Jon |
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