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#81
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Why would a "meat bomb" flight be announcing on an Approach frequency?
That's usually done on CTAF isn't it? And when did it become standard procedure to let ATC know, on an IFR flight plan, that while you are climbing it's, oh btw, solid IMC? "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... "Roger Long": What does ATC do when they see a 1200 target boring through what: they know is solid IMC? Nothing. They don't *know* it's IMC where the VFR target is on the screen. The only time I've ever heard an ATC comment about something like this was west of Houston one day. A pilot reported climbing through a solid cloud deck at the same time another pilot was reporting "jumpers away" from his meat bomb hauler nearby. The controller said something like "I don't know who it is for sure, but somebody's fibbing." -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#82
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"G.R. Patterson III" writes:
It wouldn't matter. The pilot under discussion here doesn't have an instrument rating, so he can't get an SVFR clearance anyway. Is that a U.S. rule, or are you mixing SVFR with contact approaches? All the best, David |
#83
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![]() G.R. Patterson III wrote: Happy Dog wrote: I think that a controller would be very reluctant to deny an SVFR clearance into the zone. It wouldn't matter. The pilot under discussion here doesn't have an instrument rating, so he can't get an SVFR clearance anyway. Sure he can, no instrument rating required. |
#84
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![]() David Reinhart wrote: That's a contentious point that I don't know has been settled yet, though I think the rulings so far are leaning the way you describe. Since the ASOS/AWOS is usually not located at the end of a runway (I think they try for a spot close to airport center) and airports are pretty large pieces of real estate, it's entirely possible for the system to be reporting visibility different from what the pilot is seeing from the air on approach. I think what will certainly cause the FAA to jump on you is if an RVR is installed for the runway you used and it was reporting visibility less than minimums. At my airport it is common to get a fog bank over the eastern half of the airport, the half that includes the ASOS. The western half will be CAVU, which includes the full length of the small runway I normally use. There I sit in the full sun unable to get a clearance for takeoff. |
#85
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"Kobra" wrote:
That's usually done on CTAF isn't it? Jumper planes use VFR traffic advisories a lot when they're near a radar terminal area . I hear them nearly every weekend over Trent Lott airport SW of Mobile. And when did it become standard procedure to let ATC know, on an IFR flight plan, that while you are climbing it's, oh btw, solid IMC? Did I say it was? What's your point? -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#86
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"Kobra" wrote in message
... [...] But I understood Dave's comment. He's trying to say you're being way too technical. It's like someone saying, "We all know the sun will come up tomorrow" and you arguing, "Well, technically you're incorrect. You really can't say that with 100% accuracy. There is a mathematical possibility that it will not." It's not just an academic possibility. Anyone who thinks that weather, and reports of weather, are anywhere close to being as reliable as the sun coming up each morning is fooling themselves. You can have one airplane in solid IMC, and another just 500' below, and one can be legally VFR while the other is legally IFR. In fact, for any random target on radar in controlled airspace not on an IFR flight plan and under ATC control, the most likely explanation is that the airplane is in VFR conditions, regardless of weather reported in the area by other aircraft. There are numerous other possibilities, but the bottom line is that a pilot in solid IMC has no way of knowing what flight conditions an airplane only hundreds or thousands of feet away is experiencing, nevermind can a report from that pilot be useful in knowing what flight conditions another airplane is experiencing. People need to give up their fallacious idea that weather is uniform in time and space. It's not. One of the reasons it's such a hard element of flying to come to terms with is that it's highly variable. The views expressed in this thread and others by pilots who seem to think that a single pilot report of IMC conditions is sufficient for knowing what conditions another pilot is flying in are just plain wrong, and not just in a "technicality" sense. Pete |
#87
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"Newps" wrote in message
news:R9Smb.34321$Fm2.13493@attbi_s04... If the field has an ASOS, for example, then it would have to report at least a mile, no matter what you say. That's true. I still don't see where "IFR minimums" comes into it. |
#88
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![]() David Reinhart wrote: No instrument rating is required to get a SVFR clearance during the day. I stand corrected. Thanks for the info. George Patterson You can dress a hog in a tuxedo, but he still wants to roll in the mud. |
#89
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"Peter Duniho"
So a controller would issue an SVFR clearance even if the field is below IFR minimums? What does "below IFR minimums" mean? Do you mean the minimums for an instrument approach at the airport? Why should a VFR flight be required to use reported weather when an IFR flight is not? It's not the controller's job to ensure that the pilot is obeying the FARs. I agree. Could the flight be cleared into the CZ but not cleared to land due to visibility? le moo |
#90
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"David Reinhart" wrote in message
... That's a contentious point that I don't know has been settled yet, though I think the rulings so far are leaning the way you describe. Since the ASOS/AWOS is usually not located at the end of a runway (I think they try for a spot close to airport center) and airports are pretty large pieces of real estate, it's entirely possible for the system to be reporting visibility different from what the pilot is seeing from the air on approach. I think what will certainly cause the FAA to jump on you is if an RVR is installed for the runway you used and it was reporting visibility less than minimums. I've seen fog obscure one otherwise usable runway but not another. le moo Dave Reinhart Newps wrote: Peter Duniho wrote: It's not the controller's job to ensure that the pilot is obeying the FARs. If the pilot claims that flight visibility is 1 mile, the controller should approve SVFR (assuming the necessary traffic separation conditions are met). That would only apply if there were no weather reporting at the field. If the field has an ASOS, for example, then it would have to report at least a mile, no matter what you say. |
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