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#1
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The CFI must have thought he was on a Usenet newsgroup.
The sensible response would have been, "Roger." Don |
#2
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According to the Pilot/Controller Glossary, "Roger" means "I have received
all of your last transmission." It doesn't convey anything about the pilot's intentions. A more appropriate response would have been "Wilco," which means "I have received your message, understand it, and will comply." Sadly, too few pilots use Wilco. Bob Gardner "Don Tuite" wrote in message ... The CFI must have thought he was on a Usenet newsgroup. The sensible response would have been, "Roger." Don |
#3
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I am not a CFI or even commercial rated (yet). I have had similar
situations where I fly. I've had approach chew me out because my IFR plan had just expired (hey, who would have expected having to sit for 30 minutes waiting for 10 aircraft to land at a private field). Notice, not a clearance, but flight plan. We were going to activate in the air since it was VFR conditions. All we would have needed to do was contact FSS and re-enter it. The CFII beside me had been a controller and told me that the controller was out of line. My suggestions a (1) ASRA filing -- you don't have to be the involved pilot(s). This will get someones attention to a problem. (2) Contact the FSDO and/or ADO. File a complaint about the behaviors of the controllers. This will also get things corrected. IMHO there is a reason that some people are NON-FED controllers. They couldn't hack it within the FAA or USMIL. These people, in my experience, tend to have an attitude. Lastly, mic-fright is what kept me from getting my Instrument rating for so long. And why when flying places, I would actually go well out of my way to avoid "C" and "B" airspace. Meeting with FAA personnel in WINGS programs have allowed some of us to get them to understand that even Instrument pilots get "scared" when calling ground/clearance at some airfields. Regards, Steve.T |
#4
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#5
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... I am not a CFI or even commercial rated (yet). I have had similar situations where I fly. I've had approach chew me out because my IFR plan had just expired (hey, who would have expected having to sit for 30 minutes waiting for 10 aircraft to land at a private field). Notice, not a clearance, but flight plan. We were going to activate in the air since it was VFR conditions. All we would have needed to do was contact FSS and re-enter it. The CFII beside me had been a controller and told me that the controller was out of line. A proposed flight plan generally times out two hours after the proposed departure time. Why didn't your ex-controller CFII prompt you to update the time before that? |
#6
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message k.net... wrote in message ps.com... I am not a CFI or even commercial rated (yet). I have had similar situations where I fly. I've had approach chew me out because my IFR plan had just expired (hey, who would have expected having to sit for 30 minutes waiting for 10 aircraft to land at a private field). Notice, not a clearance, but flight plan. We were going to activate in the air since it was VFR conditions. All we would have needed to do was contact FSS and re-enter it. The CFII beside me had been a controller and told me that the controller was out of line. A proposed flight plan generally times out two hours after the proposed departure time. Why didn't your ex-controller CFII prompt you to update the time before that? Maybe there's a reason he's an EX controller.... :-) Chip, ZTL |
#7
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![]() "Chip Jones" wrote in message nk.net... Maybe there's a reason he's an EX controller.... :-) No doubt, and it certainly isn't because being a CFII is more lucrative. |
#8
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I take it you missed the 30 minute wait for landing a/c? By the time we
could contact the "local" class "C" approach we are to talk to, it had expired by 5 minutes. I had flown at that airport many times before (it was where I took my PP check ride). Even on a busy day I'd never been sitting, "ready to depart", for more than 10 minutes. However, on the day in question, we had gone to the run-up area w/ NO traffic on freq and no traffic had used the airport for 10 minutes. By the time we finished run-up and radio settings, there was a tail dragger on short final, followed by 2 C-150s, then a mix of bi-wing, C-152, C-172 and a Beech. Remember, landing a/c have right of way, and they were landing as tight as you legally could. There is no RCO at that airport. Had we been given a clearance void, things would have sure been different. But since we could depart VFR and activate in the air... The CFII was a former military controller and is now retired. Maybe he was wanting to teach me how, with a real situation, to file and activate in the air -- VFR Conditions, not IMC. We had actually discussed this very situation when we realized that our filing would expire before all the traffic cleared. Later, Steve.T |
#9
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I take it you missed the 30 minute wait for landing a/c? Nope. |
#10
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wrote in message
ups.com... [...] But the tower controller didn't tell him to copy a number (altho maybe he got that on the ground. But I asked a few of the other CFIs I work with about this..most agreed with me, but a couple thought the pilot was wrong for various reasons. So...what is your take on this? Generally, one is required to comply with ATC instructions. Regardless of whether you're "in their airspace" or not. That said, it doesn't sound like the tower controller gave any particular instruction that the pilot here could have been construed as not complying with. In any case, clearly the pilot was well within his rights, whether he was within the Class D airspace or not, to maneuver as necessary to avoid other traffic. IMHO, it was a bad idea to do 360s (especially multiple 360s) without keeping the controller in the loop by telling them of the plan. But I don't see any regulatory violation. In other words: I don't think the pilot violated any federal rules, but he did violate some basic common sense rules. Between the pilot and the controller, I think the controller made more/bigger mistakes than the pilot. I agree with your thoughts that it's not helpful to get into arguments on the radio. I've had my share of "interesting" moments with ATC, but it almost never solves anything to make comments on the radio. I just stick to the important stuff, like clearances and requests and whatnot. But who knows? Maybe this particular controller, this is just what he needed to get him thinking the right way. Probably not, but you never know. ![]() Pete |
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