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![]() C Kingsbury wrote: Yeah, but we don't get earthquakes, mudslides, forest fires, or riots up here in New England, either. Though if the Red Sox manage to beat the Yankees, all bets are off... Lucky for you there's no chance of that. There's a better chance the Packers will make the playoffs. See those Vikes last night Jay? 605 yards of offense. Once the defense heals up it will be a machine. |
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Ft Worth AFSS always seems to go right through. I think the max I've ever
waited was about 1 minute. Of course, as others noted, I'm VFR only so I don't test the system on bad weather days. I'll also second what the others say about checking for TFRs. Regardless of how much preflight information I get off the computer/DUAT/etc., I always call AFSS, even on short hops, just so that I have a record of checking on NOTAMs. Carl " wrote in message ink.net... Has anyone else noticed that the time you're on hold to talk to a briefer is getting longer and longer? I noticed this about a year ago when I still lived in Florida and thought it was just a local problem. Now I live in Virginia and they have the same problem here. It used to be you could get a human on the phone in a minute or so. Now it is taking about 5 to 10. Is this how the FAA is trying to kill the FSS system? They have made no bones about wanting to reduce the coast of the FSS system. |
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"Carl Orton" wrote in message
... I'll also second what the others say about checking for TFRs. Regardless of how much preflight information I get off the computer/DUAT/etc., I always call AFSS, even on short hops, just so that I have a record of checking on NOTAMs. DUATS keeps such a record as well. From the DUATS FAQ: "A DUATS route briefing contains the same elements as a route briefing which is provided by an FAA Briefer. The briefing is recorded by DUATS, and your receipt of the data can be proven, should the need arise... The DUAT service is paid for by the FAA, and is certified by the FAA as being equivalent to a live Flight Service Specialist for pre-flight briefings." --Gary Carl |
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I called this morning around 9:30 and was on hold for 10 minutes and
hung up. I tried again around 10:15 and was on hold for 15 minutes in which time I pulled up the duats page, registered and got a briefing before the Leesburg FSS specialist came on. I had a short talk with her and she explained the administration is trying to privatize the organization and that seemed interesting that since Bush specifically said the FAA is a core government function. They will know January if they still have jobs. People have transferred and retired, they were not replaced. Additionally she said they are trying to get an arrangement with Altoona and Raleigh FSS to take overload, but red tape is stalling that. She gave me the Managers phone number to call Monday. 703-777-1832 Have fun, Michelle wrote: Has anyone else noticed that the time you're on hold to talk to a briefer is getting longer and longer? I noticed this about a year ago when I still lived in Florida and thought it was just a local problem. Now I live in Virginia and they have the same problem here. It used to be you could get a human on the phone in a minute or so. Now it is taking about 5 to 10. Is this how the FAA is trying to kill the FSS system? They have made no bones about wanting to reduce the coast of the FSS system. -- Michelle P ATP-ASEL, CP-AMEL, and AMT-A&P "Elisabeth" a Maule M-7-235B (no two are alike) Volunteer Pilot, Angel Flight Mid-Atlantic Volunteer Builder, Habitat for Humanity |
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Am I the only one that carries a list of the toll-free AFSS telephone
numbers in my flightbag? If one doesn't work call another! wrote: Has anyone else noticed that the time you're on hold to talk to a briefer is getting longer and longer? I noticed this about a year ago when I still lived in Florida and thought it was just a local problem. Now I live in Virginia and they have the same problem here. It used to be you could get a human on the phone in a minute or so. Now it is taking about 5 to 10. Is this how the FAA is trying to kill the FSS system? They have made no bones about wanting to reduce the coast of the FSS system. |
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#8
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On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 22:56:48 GMT, "
wrote in . net: Has anyone else noticed that the time you're on hold to talk to a briefer is getting longer and longer? I noticed this about a year ago when I still lived in Florida and thought it was just a local problem. Now I live in Virginia and they have the same problem here. It used to be you could get a human on the phone in a minute or so. Now it is taking about 5 to 10. Is this how the FAA is trying to kill the FSS system? They have made no bones about wanting to reduce the coast of the FSS system. LOCKHEED MARTIN: AFSS PERFORMANCE IS IMPROVING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306) Right up front, we'll say we've heard the same complaints about Lockheed Martin's handling of the Flight Service Station contract as everyone else: Long wait times, dropped calls, lost flight plans and briefers lacking local knowledge of the areas they cover. Lockheed Martin's Dan Courain, the company's VP of aviation services, says he has gotten a similar earful and at AOPA Expo on Thursday, Courain told AVweb that LockMart is doing something about. Specifically, it has rewired the call waiting system to delay bumping of calls from their origination area to other parts of the system, where briefers may be umfamiliar with local landmarks, airspace and conditions. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306 |
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On Sat, 06 Oct 2007 13:32:52 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote in : LOCKHEED MARTIN: AFSS PERFORMANCE IS IMPROVING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306) Right up front, we'll say we've heard the same complaints about Lockheed Martin's handling of the Flight Service Station contract as everyone else: Long wait times, dropped calls, lost flight plans and briefers lacking local knowledge of the areas they cover. Lockheed Martin's Dan Courain, the company's VP of aviation services, says he has gotten a similar earful and at AOPA Expo on Thursday, Courain told AVweb that LockMart is doing something about. Specifically, it has rewired the call waiting system to delay bumping of calls from their origination area to other parts of the system, where briefers may be umfamiliar with local landmarks, airspace and conditions. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306 AVWEB'S AOPA EXPO 2007 PODCAST #3: LOCKHEED MARTIN SAYS AFSS PERFORMANCE IS IMPROVING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196307) (http://media.avweb.com/banmanavweb/a...umber=6800 16) (http://media.avweb.com/banmanavweb/a...umber=11757 0) Anyone who's gotten a telephone preflight briefing during the past year knows that Lockheed Martin has had its troubles in delivering this important service to pilots. At AOPA Expo this week, AVweb's Paul Bertorelli asked Lockheed Martin Dan Courain what the company has done to improve its service. Here's his report. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196307 |
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AFSS Performance improving? Based on who's criteria?
We all know the FAA is clueless Lockheed Martin is and will be self-serving(Statistical lies and propaganda) So who says it is improving? The tooth fairy? Larry Dighera wrote: On Sat, 06 Oct 2007 13:32:52 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote in : LOCKHEED MARTIN: AFSS PERFORMANCE IS IMPROVING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306) Right up front, we'll say we've heard the same complaints about Lockheed Martin's handling of the Flight Service Station contract as everyone else: Long wait times, dropped calls, lost flight plans and briefers lacking local knowledge of the areas they cover. Lockheed Martin's Dan Courain, the company's VP of aviation services, says he has gotten a similar earful and at AOPA Expo on Thursday, Courain told AVweb that LockMart is doing something about. Specifically, it has rewired the call waiting system to delay bumping of calls from their origination area to other parts of the system, where briefers may be umfamiliar with local landmarks, airspace and conditions. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196306 AVWEB'S AOPA EXPO 2007 PODCAST #3: LOCKHEED MARTIN SAYS AFSS PERFORMANCE IS IMPROVING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196307) (http://media.avweb.com/banmanavweb/a...umber=6800 16) (http://media.avweb.com/banmanavweb/a...umber=11757 0) Anyone who's gotten a telephone preflight briefing during the past year knows that Lockheed Martin has had its troubles in delivering this important service to pilots. At AOPA Expo this week, AVweb's Paul Bertorelli asked Lockheed Martin Dan Courain what the company has done to improve its service. Here's his report. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196307 |
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