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Talking to departure control



 
 
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  #2  
Old November 1st 08, 12:06 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
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Default Talking to departure control

I'm not from the US, but just wondering if you depart ifr from an
airport and tower tells you to contact departure, I know that you
check in with callsign, altitude through, and cleared altitude.

But I was wondering if the AIM recommends anywhere also to include the
departure runway and the departure airport too.

thanks, Stan

  #3  
Old November 1st 08, 06:49 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
Viperdoc[_3_]
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Posts: 167
Default Talking to departure control

Be aware that the previous post comes from an individual who has never flown
or held a pilot certificate, or even a medical. His "knowledge" about flying
comes from playing computer games.

The difficulty is that he is frequently only partially correct, and always
refuses to admit that he's wrong.

The bottom line is that he has absolutely no experience flying at all.


  #5  
Old November 2nd 08, 01:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
Mike
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Default Talking to departure control

wrote in message
...
I'm not from the US, but just wondering if you depart ifr from an
airport and tower tells you to contact departure, I know that you
check in with callsign, altitude through, and cleared altitude.

But I was wondering if the AIM recommends anywhere also to include the
departure runway and the departure airport too.


While you are waiting for your IFR departure clearance, the tower controller
is talking to the departure controller via landline. The departure
controller tells the tower controller what heading and altitude to give you.
So departure already knows where you're supposed to be going and as he is
the one who released you, he already knows where you're coming from as well.

All you need to do is give the standard information for a handoff.

  #6  
Old November 3rd 08, 10:34 AM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
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Default Talking to departure control

Thanks for the reply, and Steven and Mike too.

Canada seems to handle their hand offs very similar to the way the US
does, however they include this phrase in their AIM

"The initial call to Departure control whould contain at least....the
runway of departure..."

Hence you often hear pilots include the runway in the intial contact.
Plus, since the wording is "at least", also the airport of departure,
since there may be more than one that departure control is working.

On Sat, 01 Nov 2008 12:34:49 +0100, Mxsmanic
wrote:

writes:

I'm not from the US, but just wondering if you depart ifr from an
airport and tower tells you to contact departure, I know that you
check in with callsign, altitude through, and cleared altitude.

But I was wondering if the AIM recommends anywhere also to include the
departure runway and the departure airport too.


They already know that from the handoff. They know your altitude, too, but
you give it so that they can verify that the encoded altitude from the
transponder matches the altitude you see on your instruments.


  #9  
Old November 3rd 08, 06:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
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Posts: 46
Default Talking to departure control

Yes, including towered fields is the way I understand it. Transport
Canada AIM, Rules of the Air and Air Traffic Services, Instrument
Flight Rules - Departure Procedures, Section 5 Standard Instrument
Departure, page 233 (2006 AIM, more current avail on the net
somewhere). The text makes no reference to towered or non towered.
However the example immediately after the recommendation to include
runway of departure is "Ottawa departures, beech .....off runway 25,
heading 250....", and the towered field at Ottawa does in fact have a
runway 25. No direct recommendation to include heading given in the
AIP, except that the communication "should contain at least" the
callsign, r/w of dept, altitude at and climbing to.

Another interesting difference, on the page before this, is the
clarification of "fly runway heading". "Runway 04, magnetic heading
044 deg, then fly a heading of 044 deg M"
The US regs would be to fly 040 deg M, IIRC.

On Mon, 3 Nov 2008 05:53:03 -0600, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote:

wrote:

Canada seems to handle their hand offs very similar to the way the US
does, however they include this phrase in their AIM

"The initial call to Departure control whould contain at least....the
runway of departure..."


Including departures from a towered field?


  #10  
Old November 3rd 08, 07:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
Steven P. McNicoll[_2_]
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Posts: 721
Default Talking to departure control

wrote:

Yes, including towered fields is the way I understand it. Transport
Canada AIM, Rules of the Air and Air Traffic Services, Instrument
Flight Rules - Departure Procedures, Section 5 Standard Instrument
Departure, page 233 (2006 AIM, more current avail on the net
somewhere). The text makes no reference to towered or non towered.
However the example immediately after the recommendation to include
runway of departure is "Ottawa departures, beech .....off runway 25,
heading 250....", and the towered field at Ottawa does in fact have a
runway 25. No direct recommendation to include heading given in the
AIP, except that the communication "should contain at least" the
callsign, r/w of dept, altitude at and climbing to.


Strange.



Another interesting difference, on the page before this, is the
clarification of "fly runway heading". "Runway 04, magnetic heading
044 deg, then fly a heading of 044 deg M"
The US regs would be to fly 040 deg M, IIRC.


Nope. From the current Pilot/Controller Glossary:


RUNWAY HEADING- The magnetic direction that corresponds with the runway
centerline extended, not
the painted runway number. When cleared to "fly or maintain runway heading,"
pilots are expected to fly or maintain the heading that corresponds with the
extended centerline of the departure runway. Drift correction shall not be
applied; e.g., Runway 4, actual magnetic heading of the runway centerline
044, fly 044.





 




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