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#91
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"Mike W." wrote in message ... Best solution would have been for controller to hold departing traffic until you were midfield downwind, or put you on left or right (opposite of standard for the runway you were using) so they would not ever cross your path. Agree with that, Mike W. Once the other aircraft was cleared for takeoff, my mistake was not asserting myself (my paper ticket was about 2 weeks old) and extending downwind or flying the opposite pattern as you suggest. I still get shivers when I think about it. |
#92
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Joe Johnson wrote:
Me: 240 hr PP-ASEL, minding my own business, doing touch & goes at an untowered field, and scrupulously calling my position in every leg of the pattern. Please file a NASA ASRS report! Really! Everyone needs to be on frequency "if able"! Best regards, Jer/ "Flight instruction and mountain flying are my vocation!" Eberhard -- Jer/ (Slash) Eberhard, Mountain Flying Aviation, LTD, Ft Collins, CO CELL 970 231-6325 EMAIL jer'at'frii.com WEB http://users.frii.com/jer/ C-206 N9513G, CFII Airplane&Glider, FAA-DEN Aviation Safety Counselor CAP-CO Mission&Aircraft CheckPilot, BM218 HAM N0FZD, 222 Young Eagles! |
#93
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On Mon, 28 Feb 2005 02:47:44 GMT, George Patterson
wrote: Joe Johnson wrote: Should I report this to the FAA? If so, how? When in the course of an aviation career does someone become so complacent that they don't say "boo" before taking an active runway? I don't know how to report it, but if a pilot has that sort of attitude, he does not deserve to hold a commercial certificate. It's possible that he/she was on the wrong frequency, but I think a chat with the Feds is in order. Although we should put out a call on UNICOM or CTAF when you have a void time, have your departure frequency and center dialed in on one radio and are talking to a control tower some where else via 121.275 and the person in the right seat says "all clear" I can see where switching back to UNICOM could be missed. Here with training, tail draggers, a preferred runway for the bigger stuff due to a noise sensitive area and the runways cross it is not uncommon to find both in use at the same time with some NORDO traffic. Admittedly not a Citation. Still running 18/24 or 06/36 at the same time with students, NORDO, and transient traffic is not at all uncommon. Add to that, The VOR-A approach comes in on a heading of 137 degrees at 500 feet AGL while the GPS 06 and 24 approaches come straight in from 5 miles out can make for an interesting day. Particularly when the ceiling is about 1500 to 2000 and approach wants you with them until it's "airport in sight". OTOH I have broken out at close to minimums to find a windshield full of a scud runner that ATC did not see. We had a Falcon 900 come in a while back and he started making announcements 12 miles out for a straight in on 06 as that was what ATC gave them. If they missed it was going to be a hard left as we were well inside a TFR and just over a mile from the 10 mile "no fly" zone. We still had a lot of traffic as we were the closest in airport that was outside the 10 mile ring. With the TFR we didn't have any NORDO traffic, but imagine that 900 on a 12 mile final with a couple of NORDOs in the pattern for the intersecting runway. As it's a safety item I'd just fill out a NASA form. In reality whether good sense or not, they were not required to make a transmission, and with a 1/4 to 1/2 mile they had plenty of time to get out of your way. Were it me I'd have just continued on in to land with an eye out for jet wash. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com George Patterson I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company. |
#94
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Joe Johnson wrote:
Me: 240 hr PP-ASEL, minding my own business, doing touch & goes at an untowered field, and scrupulously calling my position in every leg of the pattern. The offender: pilot of a small Citation jet. I saw the Citation taxiing toward the active as I was downwind. I watched the plane carefully (suspiciously) as there was never any transmission on the CTAF frequency. I listened to departure on my second radio; he/she wasn't on that frequency either. When I turned base, the Citation was at the hold short line adjacent to the active threshold. As I was on 1/4 to 1/2 mile final, the Citation suddenly took the runway and started the takeoff roll; nary a radio call was heard. Prepared for this, I did a 360, landed, and got the tail number from an airport employee. Should I report this to the FAA? If so, how? When in the course of an aviation career does someone become so complacent that they don't say "boo" before taking an active runway? We all see lots of idiot drivers on the road. I used to think aviation was different, both because the training is more rigorous and because the stakes are so much higher. With all the idiotic and careless mistakes I read about in NTSB accident reports, I'm beginning to wonder. Thanks for reading--I'm a little less upset after having written this down. Seems unlikely to me that someone flying a Citation would choose not to announce his/her position. Maybe they had the wrong freq dialed in, or didn't know that their transmitter was inop, or microphone not plugged in. |
#95
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nrp wrote:
I'm flabbergasted at how many of these comments refer to not following the radio procedures. Yes the Citation should have called, but most important is that he didn't look. We don't know that. Maybe he looked but didn't see. It happens. A Cherokee a half-mile away ought to be visible, but it's not a big target. Maybe he saw, judged that the Cherokee was not a factor. |
#96
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On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 15:14:52 -0500, Dave Butler wrote:
Maybe he saw, judged that the Cherokee was not a factor. The most likely thought, it seems to me. Or maybe I am just a happy optimist. Still, he shouldn't have scared the Cherokee pilot. That's unforgiveable. It's not enough to judge that you're doing no harm: you ought to consider the possibility that the other guy is going to interpret your actions differently. If you scare someone in an airplane, he might whang into you. In Martha's cosmos, that would be a Bad Thing. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net |
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