![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#51
|
|||
|
|||
|
George Patterson wrote:
G. Sylvester wrote: I don't know why he finds that amazing. I've made the trip from New Jersey to Knoxville, TN several times without speaking to any controllers except those at Knoxville. That's over 600 miles each way. The only other radio calls I made were the usual ones ("three miles out", "entering downwind", etc.) at my untowered fuel stop. When I flew down to Fort Myers, I talked to Orlando on the way down. On the way back, I didn't bother -- just went under it. Many other trips -- same procedure. I said amazing. I did not say 'surprising.' Of course he knows it's not abnormal. Just that after talking to ATC for a thousand or whatever number of hours per year, he finds it amazing that he can go up flying and never talk to anyone. He's so used to it, it is just amazing that he is not required to. It's not like he was blown away. So interesting that people are saying "I can fly 600nm and never talk to anyone." Many people said that how can there be people who don't know how to talk to ATC. Well there's your answer. You don't have to and some choose not to so they lose their skills. Gerald |
|
#52
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? Observation. I live in an area surrounding a large Class B airport, and there are plenty of pilots who rarely, if ever, use the radio at non-towered airports. These same pilots don't venture near towered airports or the Class B because they don't want to talk on the radio. They also typically don't venture out if the wind is stronger than "calm" and/or if there are clouds in the sky. I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. Many of the flight schools at non-towered airports around here have dried up, leaving the mega-schools at the larger towered airports for flight training. JKG |
|
#53
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article r6Oge.76216$WI3.72033@attbi_s71,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: Mary and I fly from an uncontrolled airfield, are not instrument-rated, and talk to ATC on nearly every flight. And we're in Iowa -- supposedly the far corner of the galaxy. And you're also fairly "new" pilots. When I started training 10 years ago, I had a young instructor who was comfortable on the radio, so I became comfortable on the radio. I was taught to use flight following on every flight, and was comfortable listening and talking from day 1. I don't notice the problem so much from younger folks who have been trained by younger folks, but I do notice it quite a bit in the folks who have been flying for 30 or 40 years, are not instrument rated, and only go out when the sun shines. Not sure whether the problem is comfort level or attitude, but if that were me, I wouldn't be flying around busy controlled airspace with an ADIZ overlay if I wasn't comfortable at least LISTENING to the right frequencies. JKG |
|
#54
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
"Dave Stadt" wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. JKG That's simply not true. It simply is true, in my experience. The fact is that if you fly from a non-towered airport in VFR conditions, it is not a requirement that you talk to anyone. Many folks do just that. JKG |
|
#55
|
|||
|
|||
|
Jonathan Goodish wrote:
I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. I would say they talk more even outside of aviation. Kids these days can't seem to do without conversation for more than a few minutes -- seems like they always have a cell phone stuck in their ear. Seems to me that the older the person on a phone in a public place is, the more likely it is that the conversation is necessary. George Patterson "Naked" means you ain't got no clothes on; "nekkid" means you ain't got no clothes on - and are up to somethin'. |
|
#56
|
|||
|
|||
|
"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:wcche.44$Vu6.8@trndny03... Matt Barrow wrote: Would an A2A missile be able to lock on the exhaust of a C150? I would lay heavy odds that they're not using heat-seekers in the ADIZ. Too big a chance that it would lock into a turbine coming into Dulles or Reagan. Almost certainly they're armed with missiles that use a visual lock on the target. George Patterson "Naked" means you ain't got no clothes on; "nekkid" means you ain't got no clothes on - and are up to somethin'. AFAIK, there are no A2A missles in the US inventory that are targeted visually. You have heat seakers (AIM9x), passive radar (AIM7) and active radar missles (AMRAAM.) Maverick missles have a TV-guided version but they are used against armor. One very short squeeze of the trigger would fire enough 20mm to bring down just about any light single. Which brings up this question: Why did they need the F16s at all? Aren't the Blackhawks armed with 20mm guns mounted in the doors? Did they not know the type of aircraft until the F16s arrived on station or did the helo get a viz ID first? If so, why not call off the F16s? The Blackhawk probably could have blown the C150 down with rotor wash on it's own. Jay Beckman PP-ASEL Chandler, AZ |
|
#57
|
|||
|
|||
|
Michael Houghton wrote:
I call bull**** on you. First for calling it "kidnapping". OK, "kidnapping" was overstated. Change it to "seized by force and intimidation". Second for misrepresenting the placement of the rifle What part of "pointing an assault rifle inches from the boy's face" was misrepresented? http://www.pbs.org/newshour/images/l...an/elian_a.jpg (and conveniently ignoring the important (and easily seen) placement of the trigger finger). Oh that's right, with the barrel of an assault rifle pointed inches from his face, Elian was able to remain calm and unfrightened because he noticed that the agent's trigger finger was one inch away from the trigger. It was nice to know this fact afterwards, but during the situation it was irrelevant where the trigger finger was or whether the rifle was even loaded. Well, you only addressed my example. So does that mean you concur with the first part of my statement? "This kind of treatment is routine. If this is the worst case of unnecessary force used by law enforcement, then we're in really good shape." |
|
#58
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Bucky" wrote in message oups.com... Michael Houghton wrote: I call bull**** on you. First for calling it "kidnapping". OK, "kidnapping" was overstated. Change it to "seized by force and intimidation". Second for misrepresenting the placement of the rifle What part of "pointing an assault rifle inches from the boy's face" was misrepresented? http://www.pbs.org/newshour/images/l...an/elian_a.jpg I'd say it was more at the chest of kid. But to take up for the agents who went in. They didn't know who or what was in that closet. |
|
#59
|
|||
|
|||
|
It's pretty self-evident that a significant number of pilots avoid 2 way
radio use and the airports that require it. Anyone dismissing this theory out of hand has their head in a hole. I was guilty of it for 2 years. After flying gliders for 15+ years where we use the radio constantly but almost never with ATC, I re-entered the ASEL community. I avoided ATC whenever possible and as others have pointed out, you can fly almost anywhere without talking to anyone. And I live under the outer edge of a Class C. No problem with CTAF, just no ATC. I came to understand that my behavior was stupid. As others have stated, an instrument rating is excellent radio training. A good way to shock under 40 pilots is to tell them that "no one" used headsets back in the day. How stupid was that! Jonathan Goodish wrote: In article , Jack Allison wrote: Jonathan Goodish wrote: If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. What do you base this theory on? Speculation? Gut feel? Facts? Observation. I live in an area surrounding a large Class B airport, and there are plenty of pilots who rarely, if ever, use the radio at non-towered airports. These same pilots don't venture near towered airports or the Class B because they don't want to talk on the radio. They also typically don't venture out if the wind is stronger than "calm" and/or if there are clouds in the sky. I will say that the "younger" pilots around here seem to have more towered-airport training, and appear to be less inhibited about talking on the radio. Many of the flight schools at non-towered airports around here have dried up, leaving the mega-schools at the larger towered airports for flight training. JKG |
|
#60
|
|||
|
|||
|
Seems to me that he needed only a $140 gps with a proximity waypoint around
the Washington monument to keep him out of trouble. Jay Honeck wrote in message ... If you fly from an uncontrolled field and aren't an instrument pilot, there is a good chance that you very rarely, if ever, talk to anyone on the radio. ??? Mary and I fly from an uncontrolled airfield, are not instrument-rated, and talk to ATC on nearly every flight. And we're in Iowa -- supposedly the far corner of the galaxy. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 03:26 PM |
| Spin Training | Captain Wubba | Piloting | 25 | April 12th 04 03:11 PM |
| Here's the Recompiled List of 82 Aircraft Accessible Aviation Museums! | Jay Honeck | Home Built | 18 | January 20th 04 05:02 PM |
| Aviation Conspiracy: Bush Backs Down On Tower Privatization Issue!!! | Bill Mulcahy | General Aviation | 3 | October 1st 03 06:39 AM |
| Airport Manager position, Fitchburg, MA | David Reinhart | Piloting | 6 | August 13th 03 12:46 AM |