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"Bela P. Havasreti" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Aug 2006 01:09:42 GMT, "soxinbox" wrote: I use taxing to active all the time. I can't see the wind sock from where my hangar is, so I have no idea what runway I am going to use. This serves several purposes, which I guess is why CFIs teach students to do this. Uggh... . Why do you need to see a windsock to determine which way the wind is blowing? Looking at trees is good for determining the current wind. Where I fly there are often days where the wind is calm with occasional stong gusts that tend to come from the same direction. If I look at the sock when the wind is calm, I can see the direction of the last gust. Trees can't do this unless you sit there patiently and wait for the next gust. Also when your hanger is in the middle of multiple rows of hangers, you can't see the trees and the wind is distorted by the hangers. There are a lot of small airports with multiple rows of hangers. You could look at the trees or sock on the way into the airport, but sometimes I like to take care of a few things in the hanger, and may be in the hanger for several hours before departing. If you always operate from small fields, or operate in an area were the winds are consistant I can see how you might not have considered this. I often see wind shifts on a 15 minute basis. 1. As someone already mentioned, it avoids two planes getting stuck like goats on a mountain trail while taxiing between hangers. I'll allow this argument at (what?) maybe 5% of the airports most folks fly out of.... Any airport with mutiple parallel rows of T-hangers has this problem. It is probably higher than 5%, but I couldn't back that up with any statistics. 2. It lets approaching aircraft know there is ground activity, so that the approaching aircraft and ground/departing aircraft can avoid using the runway at the same time. If I am approaching a field and I have heard ground traffic, I am going to be sure to identify their location before turning final. Why would approaching aircraft give a rats _ss about what ground activity is going on at the airport (especially if it's a big _ss ex-WW2 air base airport?). What this behavior is closely linked to (i.e., relying on the radio to do your "hard work" for you) is the primary "pet peeve" of those of use who are posting here / complaining about this stuff. If all pilots were perfect, than they would all be able to see every plane in the area. In the real world, it is nice to have the added use of radios to augment our imperfect senses. An approaching plane doesn't care about ground traffic unless the ground traffic is likely to become air traffic prior to his becomeing ground traffic. If you don't believe in using radios to "do your hardwork" of identifying potential conflicts, than why bother with possition reports at all? What you are talking about, is having folks blab crap on the CTAF frequency about their ground-antics that (may) make it less work for you to approach the airport and land there. I'll freely admit that if the CTAF is "dead" (not much communication going on) there ain't a great deal of harm in doing so. However, if you live on the same planet we do (and there's 6+ fields within 50 square nautical miles that use the same CTAF frequency), it's a waste of broadcast bandwidth. It would be better to say clear of 28 instead of clear of active. I prefer someone saying "clear of active" rather than "clear of ... uh...what was that... clear of 28." I'd prefer that aircraft that just landed would expedite their exit from the active runway and (quietly) taxi back to their parking spot. At a controlled airport, saying clear of active lets the controller know he can now give a takeoff clearance to any planes waiting for departure. ????? The controller is *NOT* waiting for you to say that so he can give clearance to waiting aircraft.... To put in it brief terms, it's not your "responsibility" to let the controller know the runway is "available" for the next user.... I might be wrong on this one. When the airport is fogged in and the controller can't see the runway, how does the controller know that the plan is off the runway? I thought it was done by the landing plane anouncing he was clear of the runway, but as I said, I might be wrong. If I am wrong, than I concede that point. I still think it is useful on airports with hump runways, and when taking off into the sun. I guess this probably comes into play when visibility is low and the tower can't see the planes leaving the runway. I suppose this may not be necessary at some small uncontrolled fields, but it is probably a bad idea to alter your procedure based on field size and field visibility. Hey, if you can't adapt your procedure (or communication protocol) for the environment you're flying into, I don't know what to say.... If we took your suggestions, and did not announce clear of active at small fields, than you would get a bunch of pilots trained on small fields not announcing clear of active when they flew into large controlled fields when it is necessary. When is it necessary to announce at "large controlled fields" that you're "clear of the active"? Please site the FAR or AIM that compels you to do so. This logic is the same reason I do my GUMPS check even when flying fixed gear aircraft. ????????? and that has precisely what to do with this topic??? It is an argument for adopting a standard set of proceedures to follow. Do your gumps check whether or not you have retractable gear, start your timer turning inbound on a hold evan if the legs are dme based instead of timed, and (here's the tie in ) use the same comunication proceedures weather it is nessesery or not at that particular airport. Bela P. Havasreti "Bela P. Havasreti" wrote in message ... CFIs, will you please, PLEASE stop teaching students this stuff?!!! 8^) On 122.75: Making 30+ second long position reports, 4500 feet over some non-descript / podunk town. More annoying when the broadcaster does so in broken english. Even more annoying when the broadcaster does so every 5 minutes! On CTAF: Announcing that you're taxiing from your parking spot to "the active runway" at an airport that's the size of an ex-WW2 air base. Who cares? On CTAF: Announcing that you're "Clear of the active". You might think anyone who is waiting to take off can *see* when you're clear. The only exception I can think of is a (severely) crowned runway where the other end can't be seen from the departure end. I'll think of some more later.... grins Bela P. Havasreti |
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