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#11
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I think he is talking about the system.
It is probably fair to assume that if an IFR aircraft in the clouds collides with a VFR aircraft, there has been a breakdown in the system somewhere, most likely by the VFR aircraft not playing by the rules. On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 10:40:49 -0600, "Bill Denton" wrote: "Peter R." wrote in message ... Bill Denton ) wrote: And I don't know if this is a trick question, but if you are at 6000 (no +500) wouldn't you be on an IFR flight plan, talking to ATC, and receiving traffic advisories? In the US and outside of class B airspace, it is the pilot, not ATC, who is ultimately responsible for IFR/VFR traffic separation. A VFR traffic advisory to an IFR aircraft is a courtesy offered by ATC; it is not a guarantee. -- Peter You might want to rethink your reply. A pilot in clouds or other IMC cannot provide separation to any traffic he cannot see. |
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