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#11
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"Blanche" wrote in message ... Uh....if you're between 18K and 60K in the US, then you are required to be on an IFR flight plan, hence only at even number altitudes. 33,500 is inappropriate. That's not correct. You're required to be on an IFR flight plan in Class A airspace, but not all airspace between 18K and 60K in the US is Class A. By the way, 33,500 IS an even number. |
#12
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In a previous article, "Steven P. McNicoll" said:
"Blanche" wrote in message ... Uh....if you're between 18K and 60K in the US, then you are required to be on an IFR flight plan, hence only at even number altitudes. 33,500 is inappropriate. That's not correct. You're required to be on an IFR flight plan in Class A airspace, but not all airspace between 18K and 60K in the US is Class A. By the way, 33,500 IS an even number. Plus 33,500 is a perfectly valid altitude on an IFR flight plan if you're climbing, descending, VFR-OTP, given a block altitude or on a cruise clearance. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ please excuse my typing, but my whole left arm is in a cast. and i don't mean _the king and i_. |
#13
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"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... In a previous article, "Steven P. McNicoll" said: "Blanche" wrote in message ... Uh....if you're between 18K and 60K in the US, then you are required to be on an IFR flight plan, hence only at even number altitudes. 33,500 is inappropriate. That's not correct. You're required to be on an IFR flight plan in Class A airspace, but not all airspace between 18K and 60K in the US is Class A. By the way, 33,500 IS an even number. Plus 33,500 is a perfectly valid altitude on an IFR flight plan if you're climbing, descending, VFR-OTP, given a block altitude or on a cruise clearance. VFR On Top at 33,500? |
#14
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33,500 is a whole number. Try "leaving flight level three three
five". Sorry, it was a stupid question. But a newbie airline pilot asked me and I made the assumption that the answer wasn't obvious. I guess my intuitive reaction is to think of FL's are in thousands, when they're really in 100's. Duh. Thanks |
#15
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Why can't you say FL 335? After all 33,000ft is FL 330.
You're absolutely right. Dumb question. I should have written it before asking. Thank you. |
#16
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Your leaving Angels 33 point 5? Or Flight level 335..?
The 33 point 5 is what spawned the question. A new airline pilot asked me what was proper instead of the 33.5 that most people seem to use. I didn't carry my decimals properly and missed the friggin obvious answer. Flight Level 335 is proper. Obviously, I don't fly those altitudes. :-) Thanks |
#17
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
"Blanche" wrote in message Uh....if you're between 18K and 60K in the US, then you are required to be on an IFR flight plan, hence only at even number altitudes. 33,500 is inappropriate. That's not correct. You're required to be on an IFR flight plan in Class A airspace, but not all airspace between 18K and 60K in the US is Class A. By the way, 33,500 IS an even number. My bad. I meant all thousands, not the half thousands that we're used to in VFR. Second my bad...what airspace in the US 18K and 60K is not Class A? Not counting the big mountain in Washington state. (sorry, can't remember the name) |
#18
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"Matt Barrow" wrote in message ... VFR On Top at 33,500? Yes. Not all airspace between 18K and 60K in the US is Class A. |
#19
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"Blanche" wrote in message ... Second my bad...what airspace in the US 18K and 60K is not Class A? There's no Class A airspace over Hawaii, the Alaska Peninsula west of longitude 160° 00' 00" West, the California islands Santa Barbara and Farallon, and the Florida keys south of latitude 25° 04' 00" North. Not counting the big mountain in Washington state. (sorry, can't remember the name) I think you mean Alaska. The highest point in the contiguous states is California's Mt. Whithey at 14,494 feet. The airspace above 18,000' but less than 1,500 feet above the surface of the earth in Alaska is not Class A. |
#20
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In a previous article, "Matt Barrow" said:
"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... Plus 33,500 is a perfectly valid altitude on an IFR flight plan if you're climbing, descending, VFR-OTP, given a block altitude or on a cruise clearance. VFR On Top at 33,500? You can't do VFR OTP in class A? I didn't know that. I assumed that since it was still an IFR clearance, it was still valid. Not that flight level rules are likely to apply to me any time soon. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ please excuse my typing, but my whole left arm is in a cast. and i don't mean _the king and i_. |
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