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#271
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On 3 Aug 2006 12:40:33 -0700, "
wrote: In your experience in the USAF who did the actual coordination with the FAA? In my experience it was a group at a numbered AF HQ, and the time it took for unit-level schedule changes to make it up to the HQ and hit the FAA caused a long delay, with the flying unit assuming that the airspace coordination had been done when it may or may not have actually occurred, which resulted in aircraft on MTRs that supposedly were cold, unanticipated arrivals on ranges, multiple units using the same MTR, etc. It would vary with the unit and the mission. Typically the airspace for training was local to the base--i.e. Holloman airspace was theirs and not shared for example with Cannon. Nellis airspace belonged to Nellis and George airspace belonged to George. Very little went through numbered AF. Coordination of daily schedules and airspace requirements would flow from the Wing to the ARTCC. Ranges were controlled by the military. MTRs could be used by multiple units although a majority of the routes that I saw were base dedicated. Some could be used by other bases and that was coordinated between the bases and ARTCC. There was no such thing as an "unanticipated arrival on ranges"--you had a scheduled range time before takeoff. If you didn't have scheduled range time you didn't go. We kept track of specific flight schedules via the frag orders, which sometimes matched reality and sometimes not. Frag orders are "frag"ments of the total operations order. This is a real operations term, not a training document. You get a frag at a unit in combat. It is part of the total operations plan for the day generated at the component command Hq level. It, by defnition, IS reality. We had a continual problem with weekend use of MTRs when schedules changed but the USAF had nobody on duty on Saturday/Sunday coordinating with the FAA in the region where I worked. From the time I entered active duty (which was 1964) I was never at an installation that did not have a command post which operated 24/7. Even units which did not conduct operations on weekends had such a function. In those days the point-of-contact was the "airdrome officer" who typically was located in base operations. There was always someone on duty. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
#272
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On Thu, 03 Aug 2006 20:50:20 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote: On Thu, 03 Aug 2006 16:08:14 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote in : On Thu, 03 Aug 2006 15:28:47 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote: On Tue, 01 Aug 2006 15:25:29 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote in : With regard to low-level MTRs, isn't the ceiling 500' AGL to 1,500' AGL? Why not just fly over top of the proposed MTR restricted airspace? If that approach should happen to interfere with navigation, then the pilot would do what he always does to enter R airspace: Contact ATC. I don't see the problem you apparently do. What am I overlooking? You've added a factor not previously in evidence. Which factor is that? The factor described in the next sentence--a specific and very limited altitude block. If you draw the MTR with those altitude specs, then you MAY be able to create routes that would be meet training requirements and allow for reasonably unhindered GA traffic. That seemed obvious to me. Note the capitalized qualifier. You most probably will not be able to create satisfactory training conditions and you will still very likely impinge on GA traffic's ability to move unhindered. You're overlooking the fact that ATC doesn't usually have coverage at those altitudes in areas typically employed for MTRs. Agreed. Are you saying there is a requirement for ATC to have radar coverage of all R airspace? Or are you saying, that if the military is going to shoulder responsibility for the hazard to air safety their high-speed, low-level operations create, it would require ATC radar coverage? You keep seeking foolproof deconfliction. There is NO requirement for ATC to have radar coverage anywhere. It is desired, but procedural control is in effect in large areas of the world. And there is NO requirement for the military to shoulder responsibility for a hazard that is nothing more than your repeated assertions. And there is NO requirement for the military to have ATC radar coverage to conduct flight operations anywhere. It is desireable, but not an absolute necessity. ATC had perfectly good radar coverage in Florida, but it didn't prevent the MAC. And the Cessna pilot was found to have been partially responsible as a result of being incapable of avoiding at the speeds involved. They won't be able to offer you the desired "no responsibility on the part of the GA pilot" guarantee of no threat because they can't see traffic at those altitudes. First, I never indicated that GA should have 'no responsibility'; I said the military should bear sole legal responsibility for the hazards it poses to air safety as a result of operating under its exemption to the 250 knot speed limit below 10,000' feet. If the military bears "sole responsibility" there is then "no responsibility" for anyone else. Q.E.D. Next, There would be no necessity for the military to take sole responsibility as mentioned above, if they were operating in Class R airspace (unless they failed to schedule it with ATC/FSS). Additionally, training maneuvers on an MTR may require formation repositioning, simulated evasive maneuvers, simulated armed reconnaisance [sic] maneuvering and even simulated weapons delivery maneuvers and re-attacks. Those requirements could seriously mitigate your ability to create 500-1500' AGL corridors. [Mitigate: to cause to become less harsh or hostile] Mitigate---to lessen. Add training requirements, not simply a path from A to B and you lessen your ability to create a MTR within restricted narrow altitude blocks that doesn't interfere with GA traffic. Not being familiar with those operations, I ask, would it be feasible to conduct those operations above 10,000'? If not, why not? No. You can't do effective low altitude training at high altitude. I presume formation repositioning, simulated evasive maneuvers, simulated armed reconnaissance maneuvering and simulated weapons delivery maneuvers and re-attacks may require larger lateral, and perhaps vertical, boundaries than are currently provided by MTRs. Is that correct? Yes. Isn't joint-use under VFR more practical? Joint use of MTR airspace causes a hazard to air navigation because of the high speeds involved. Practicality is trumped by air safety in my mind. Is it not in yours? If you ask that last sentence question, you must not have been paying attention throught the last 120 messages here. The (relatively) high speeds involved are not the problem you continually try to make them. We disagree about that. (And you have evaded the question.) Your question is based on an untrue presumption. The speeds involved do not preclude safe operations. That has been stated repeatedly by a number of experienced pilots and you continue to ignore it. Would you characterize yourself as typical of the skill level attained by the majority of military fighter pilots? You demonstrate here that you actually don't know many military fighter pilots (BTW, there is no other kind--all fighter pilots are military) The Flying Tigers were a civilian group. Anyone who thinks the Flying Tigers were not fighter pilots is uninformed and/or delusional. The Flying Tigers (AVG) were military pilots. They were trained by the military and operating beyond the umbrella of national authority. Similarly the Air America/Raven operations of SEA were military pilots operating out of uniform. If someone is flying a fighter aircraft, they are not necessarily a fighter pilot. But, if someone is a fighter pilot you can pretty much guarantee that they will tell you they are better than the average. My skill level was generally above the majority. Right. So using your own personal experiences as examples in this discussion is atypical of most military pilots, by your own admission. Fighter pilots are confident to the point of arrogance. If you are going to enter combat alone in a complex system, you had better think you are pretty damn good. If you aren't and you know it, you'd better change jobs. If you are and you don't know it, you won't get the job done and you'll endanger your leader or your wingmen. I flew 250 combat missions--over 150 of them over North Vietnam without ever losing a leader in front of me or a wingman that I was leading. I'm good and that's not bragging it's fact. Using my personal experiences in this discussion to this point has been merely to point out professional facts. If you were talking about medicine you would listen to a doctor. If you are talking about flying fighters, please have the grace to listen. [...] therefore the exemption of the 250 knot restriction remains necessary. I don't recall having said the exemption isn't necessary. My objection is to the _hazard_ operating in excess of the speed limit the National Airspace System designers chose while creating the system. If you think the 250 knot limit below 10,000' is unwarranted, perhaps your credentials are superior to those who designed the system. Doubtful. My credentials may be different than theirs. But, they recognized the operational and aerodyamic necessity of the exception as well as I do. You are apparently the only one who does not recognize that some high performance tactical aircraft require that exemption to operate safely. 'Tis you Moriarty, not I. You'll find it impossible to locate a single instance in which I advocated operating an aircraft below its safe minimum speed. My issue is the operation in excess of the 250 knot speed limit in joint use airspace, and the hazard it causes to civil aviation. The proximate paragraph above this seems to provide the single instance requested in the next paragraph further above. Let's do a little analysis. VFR minimum visibility: 3 statute miles = 15,480' 250 knots: 417' per second Time to impact at 250 knots closing: 37 seconds (3 statute miles) OK, hold your breath for 37 seconds. It's an incredibly long time. I am able to hold my breath for 1.5 minutes. Other's have done so recently for nearly 9 minutes. Of course, fast-movers operate in excess of 250 knots, and the equation does not consider head-on situations as occurred in Florida. The closing speed was 480 knots in that instance, which works out to a little over 19 seconds to visually identify the conflicting traffic at 3 statute miles, decide to take evasive action, and have the aircraft clear of the path of impact. These times do not take into consideration the speed of BOTH aircraft, and more importantly, they do not allow for the time it takes to recognize the threat, decide to maneuver out of the path, and the time it takes for the aircraft to respond and actually finish clearing the path. Three seconds? Maybe five if you can't make a decision quickly. Okay. Four seconds to make the decision to take evasive action, and a couple of seconds to input control commands and for the aircraft to actually clear the path, that leaves 13 seconds to visually identify the head-on traffic at 3 statute miles in minimum VMC. Now, if you consider a fighter at 300 knots approaching a 250 knot airliner head on, the closure rate would be 550 knots permitting only 17 seconds until impact. Subtracting six seconds for decision and maneuvering, leaves 11 seconds to visually identify the threat. That's precious little time to see-and-avoid in single pilot operations. If you can't make see-and-avoid decisions in less time than that, I wonder how you drive to work in the morning. More likely, the exemption was issued as a necessary expedient at a time when the sky was much bigger (if you know what I mean), and there was less oversight. Today that exemption creates a negative impact on air safety, and the whole issue should be objectively reexamined by qualified engineers. Not engineers you twit. Operators! [Ah. Invective and deprecation: the last refuge of the unarmed. Are you aware of how such loss of civility diminishes any respect you may have had? I don't expect you capable of apologizing. Disappointing.] At this point, Scarlett, I don't give a damn. Operators are not skilled in the disciplines of engineering. Operators have a vested interest in the decisions. Engineers use objective calculations to discover system limitations, not necessity nor emotion to arrive at unrealistic conclusions. Engineers do a lot of foolish things--one needed only to see the polyester double-knits they wore to work at Northrop when I was there working on YF-23. What they don't do is operate the equipment. That's why establishing OPERATING rules and limitations is a function of operators. You can get an engineer to tell you how slow an aircraft can fly and he can tell you what G is available at what bank angle to create what rate of turn. But, if you want to know if that is practical or safe as a minimum for operations, you'd better ask the pilot. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
#273
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I've attempted that, and also contacting the FSS as printed on the
charts themselves, and often the putative controlling agency doesn't know whether it's hot or not. That is true. Why do you suppose that occurs? Do you think ATC is so disorganized, that they can't find the military activity information, or do you think the military has provided ambiguous information, what? It would seem, that given the system in place for activating and deactivating Restricted airspace, there should be a concrete answer available at all times. It doesn't really matter why I suppose that is. I don't know why that is. I could speculate. Hell, this is Usenet, why not. ![]() that much communication between the military and ATC. I suspect the military doesn't want to say much, and ATC has learned to live with it. But maybe some controllers would know more. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#274
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Great, you've got 19 seconds and I've got 19 seconds. Head-on, unless
we are perfectly aligned with miss each other ("Big Sky theory"), but if either of us see the other, then we do what? That's not the point. We have ninteen seconds to notice each other. For much of that time we each are just a grey dot in a busy grey landscape, and aren't where the other pilot happened to be looking. The F16 is also probably in camouflage colors. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#275
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Bob Noel wrote:
Airliners aren't known for great visibility either. And yet they have so few MAC's. Why is that? ATC Radar TCAS There must be a lesson there, somewhere. Big ugly airplanes are easy to spot. The F-4 and the A-6 and the P-3 should have a clean MAC record then. Jack |
#276
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Jose wrote:
OK, hold your breath for 37 seconds. It's an incredibly long time. It's a lot of sky to scan. And if nose to nose, you only have 19 seconds. Nineteen seconds? I sure as hell hope nobody who thinks nineteen seconds is too short a time to find and recognize a threat and then take appropriate action is driving on my street or flying in my sky (but of course they are). There's way too many passengers with pilot certificates sitting in the front seats these days. How people scan and how they should scan are often two different things. Flying an aircraft is work, Jose, when done properly. Enjoyable, also? Yes, but it's the "work" part that adds to longevity. Jack |
#277
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I sure as hell hope nobody who thinks nineteen seconds is too short
a time to find and recognize a threat and then take appropriate action is driving on my street or flying in my sky (but of course they are). There's way too many passengers with pilot certificates sitting in the front seats these days. How people scan and how they should scan are often two different things. Flying an aircraft is work, Jose, when done properly. Enjoyable, also? Yes, but it's the "work" part that adds to longevity. If you are looking at the encroaching aircraft, then nineteen seconds is probably plenty of time. The point is, usually you are not. You just scanned that part of the sky. You are now scanning other parts of the sky. You can't scan it all at the same time. It takes time. You may not return to that part of the sky for nineteen seconds, except in general. Conflicts can come from any direction, and you can only see (well) in a field 10 or 15 degrees wide. It only takes a few seconds per "block" but there are 24 to 36 blocks, and we are not even counting what is above or below by more than 15 degrees. So, at two seconds per look, and 24 looks, we have forty-eight seconds before you get another shot at the same 10-15 degree area. Depending on conditions, it may take as much as TEN SECONDS to actually see the traffic that you are looking right at. The implication of this is that if you allow two seconds per look, and it takes you ten seconds to see traffic in the configuration in question, you'll miss it four times out of five. But enough theory. How many times have you not seen traffic that was pointed out to you (2 o'clock and four miles) by ATC? How long did it take you to find the traffic you =did= see? http://www.alaska.faa.gov/ata/MACA.htm Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#278
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Larry Dighera wrote:
The Flying Tigers were a civilian group. Anyone who thinks the Flying Tigers were not fighter pilots is uninformed and/or delusional. Anyone who thinks Chennault's Flying Tigers were civilians is uninformed and/or delusional. Jack |
#279
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Larry Dighera wrote:
You demonstrate here that you actually don't know many military fighter pilots (BTW, there is no other kind--all fighter pilots are military) The Flying Tigers were a civilian group. Anyone who thinks the Flying Tigers were not fighter pilots is uninformed and/or delusional. The Flying Tigers were a military group. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/military |
#280
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On Thu, 03 Aug 2006 23:31:06 GMT, Jose
wrote: It doesn't really matter why I suppose that is. I don't know why that is. I could speculate. Hell, this is Usenet, why not. ![]() that much communication between the military and ATC. I suspect the military doesn't want to say much, and ATC has learned to live with it. But maybe some controllers would know more. Jose Maybe you would pay attention to the posters here who have indicated that they are experienced military aviators. Then what you "suspect" could be adjusted to fit what you have learned. Every flight, every day, by the military is on a flight plan. All operations are conducted under IFR flight plans, which means that before the aircraft rolls down the runway the flight has an ATC clearance. The military has learned to live with ATC. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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