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#1
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... Which can become very dangerous if the confusion happens the other way round. For this reason the ICAO phraseology is "line up". How would the confusion happen the other way round? |
#2
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
Which can become very dangerous if the confusion happens the other way round. For this reason the ICAO phraseology is "line up". How would the confusion happen the other way round? You're joking, aren't you? Stefan |
#3
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... You're joking, aren't you? No. |
#4
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
You're joking, aren't you? No. If a pilot can mistakenly understand "hold position" instead of "position and hold", then it doesn't take much imagination to see that he can also mistakenly understand "position and hold" instead of "hold position". Does this take so much imagination? Example Pilot (waiting at holding point to some runway): Asks for something. Tower: "Hold position!" (Because there's a plane in short final.) Pilot: Understands "position and hold". Stefan |
#5
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... If a pilot can mistakenly understand "hold position" instead of "position and hold", then it doesn't take much imagination to see that he can also mistakenly understand "position and hold" instead of "hold position". Does this take so much imagination? Example Pilot (waiting at holding point to some runway): Asks for something. Tower: "Hold position!" (Because there's a plane in short final.) Pilot: Understands "position and hold". That may be, but we're not talking about the phrase "hold position". |
#6
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
That may be, but we're not talking about the phrase "hold position". It's inherent to confusions that there are two phrases involved, one you did say and one you "weren't talking about", but the other party was thinking to hear nevertheless. Stefan |
#7
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
You're joking, aren't you? No. If a pilot can mistakenly understand "hold position" instead of "position and hold", then it doesn't take much imagination to see that he can also mistakenly understand "position and hold" instead of "hold position". Example Pilot (waiting at holding point to some runway): Asks for something. Tower: "Hold position!" (Because there's a plane in short final.) Pilot: Understands "position and hold". Stefan |
#8
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"Cessna 1234 Foxtrot, taxi to and HOLD short of two one."
Our intrepid pilot, for one reason or another, mistakes this for position and hold, not hold short of. Another thread regarding to use of 'Wilco' instead of readbacks rears its ugly head, or the tower mishears the Cessna's readback, or the readback is ambiguous: "Santa Monica Tower, Cessna 1234 Foxtrot holding two one." When you have two different 'holds' in the lexicon, there's opportunity for confusion. Non-sterile cockpit, background noise, staticy radio, any of those plus a pilot or controller who isn't _listening_ but instead is expecting to hear something different, and you could get the reciprocal. Ben Hallert PP-ASEL |
#9
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Ben Hallert wrote:
"Cessna 1234 Foxtrot, taxi to and HOLD short of two one." Our intrepid pilot, for one reason or another, mistakes this for position and hold, not hold short of. Another thread regarding to use of 'Wilco' instead of readbacks rears its ugly head, or the tower mishears the Cessna's readback, or the readback is ambiguous: "Santa Monica Tower, Cessna 1234 Foxtrot holding two one." While I realize that it is a requirement for pilots to read back all hold short instructions, the controllers at the Class C airport where I am based are very good about ensuring that pilots read back the hold short instruction exactly as they heard it. If there is any apparent confusion or ambiguous wording by the pilot, the ground or tower controller will continue to repeat the instruction, along with addition choice words ("I NEED you to repeat the hold short instruction exactly as I worded it.") until the pilot gets it right. On a related note, I have to admit that just recently I mistakenly used a "wilco" in response to Boston Logan tower's instruction to "position and hold." The tower controller very calmly repeated the instruction and hinted that he was expecting a full readback (I cannot remember exactly how he hinted it, but whatever he did worked). -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#10
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![]() Ben Hallert wrote: "Cessna 1234 Foxtrot, taxi to and HOLD short of two one." Improper phraseology, there's no reason to add "and hold short of two one." |
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