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#51
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-----Original Message----- From: Jim Macklin [mailto
Posted At: Friday, November 03, 2006 4:10 PMPosted To: rec.aviation.ifr Conversation: IFR in the Eastern Mountains Subject: IFR in the Eastern Mountains ... are also a lot of flat landers who die in Arkansas. I don't remember exactly when, but in the '70s or early '80s PGO just West of KMEZ was renamed from Page VOR to Rich Mountain VOR. A voice message was added to the Morse identifier -- Caution, rapidly rising terrain... The identifier remained the same however. This was specifically in response to the growing aluminum content on the Southern slope of that hill. The terrain to the South is relatively flat and then all of a sudden the Kiamichi Mountains jump almost straight up in a very short lateral distance. We never thought about it because traveling from the North you already had to account for the Ozarks and the Boston Mountains; Rich was just one more hill to cross. I was in Mena last Saturday and had a chance to fly over that terrain for the first time in about 20 years. It still looks like hills, and at this time of year - beautiful hills. |
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#52
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I remember that the name change happened while I was in
Tulsa attending Spartan, mid 70s. "Jim Carter" wrote in message news:001a01c6ffa0$d7da0e40$4001a8c0@omnibook6100.. . | | | -----Original Message----- | From: Jim Macklin [mailto
| Posted At: Friday, November 03, 2006 4:10 PM| Posted To: rec.aviation.ifr | Conversation: IFR in the Eastern Mountains | Subject: IFR in the Eastern Mountains | | ... are also a lot of flat landers who die in Arkansas. | | | I don't remember exactly when, but in the '70s or early '80s PGO just | West of KMEZ was renamed from Page VOR to Rich Mountain VOR. A voice | message was added to the Morse identifier -- Caution, rapidly rising | terrain... The identifier remained the same however. | | This was specifically in response to the growing aluminum content on the | Southern slope of that hill. The terrain to the South is relatively flat | and then all of a sudden the Kiamichi Mountains jump almost straight up | in a very short lateral distance. We never thought about it because | traveling from the North you already had to account for the Ozarks and | the Boston Mountains; Rich was just one more hill to cross. | | I was in Mena last Saturday and had a chance to fly over that terrain | for the first time in about 20 years. It still looks like hills, and at | this time of year - beautiful hills. | |
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#53
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We often top moutains over 14,000.
-Robert I love the Rockies, Sierra and Cascades and readily admit they are more spectacular than our Appalacians, as well as higher. However, I've flown to the West Coast several times and to Alaska twice and I NEVER had to "top mountains over 14,000." IIRC, one can fly from PA to AK without ever getting above 8,000' msl. And that is over the relatively flat (though high) land of southern Wyoming. Perhaps you need to learn to fly BETWEEN the mountains. ((:-)) vince norris |
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#54
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
The subject line made me laugh. I'm from out West. When I took my kids to Mt Vernon, they asked me "Dad, why do they call it 'Mt'?". "Seethat little hill over there?...". We often top moutains over 14,000. -Robert My experience is that can't be done safely (or easily) on a consistant basis without turbine engines and pressurization. Do you do it differently? |
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#55
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Jim Macklin wrote:
There are as many dead pilots from hitting steeply rising terrain from Georgia to Maine as die west of Denver. There are also a lot of flat landers who die in Arkansas. It isn't the altitude, it is the suddenness of the mountain and whether the pilot is really thinking about it being a hump, ridge, hill or mountain? TWA 514 comes to mind. |
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#56
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: IIRC, one can fly from PA to AK without ever getting above 8,000' msl.
: And that is over the relatively flat (though high) land of southern : Wyoming. I flew from VA to AK and could have done it without ever having to fly over 6000'. : Perhaps you need to learn to fly BETWEEN the mountains. ((:-)) That'll do it. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
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#57
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#58
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Sam Spade wrote: Robert M. Gary wrote: The subject line made me laugh. I'm from out West. When I took my kids to Mt Vernon, they asked me "Dad, why do they call it 'Mt'?". "Seethat little hill over there?...". We often top moutains over 14,000. -Robert My experience is that can't be done safely (or easily) on a consistant basis without turbine engines and pressurization. Do you do it differently? My Mooney rides happy between 16,000 and 17,000 feet. No pressurization, just O2. 14,000 are peaks. Of course I've never tried it IFR. My IFR route is to cross into the LA basin via Blythe and then up Gorman area, or if ice is a real issue up the coastal airway to SF. However, its very rare to find ice over Gorman and solid IMC over the Sierras. Maybe a few days a year you get that type of wx. Storms don't sit around long in California and they're usually easily predictable. -Robert -Robert |
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#59
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
My Mooney rides happy between 16,000 and 17,000 feet. No pressurization, just O2. 14,000 are peaks. Of course I've never tried it IFR. My IFR route is to cross into the LA basin via Blythe and then up Gorman area, or if ice is a real issue up the coastal airway to SF. However, its very rare to find ice over Gorman and solid IMC over the Sierras. Maybe a few days a year you get that type of wx. Storms don't sit around long in California and they're usually easily predictable. -Robert I know all those routes and areas very well. As you know there isn't any Victor airway that crosses the crest of the High Sierra at its higher area. One jet route does (J-110) but it often is not available because of R-2508. The highest non-jet routes in that area are the two terminal routes onto the KBIH VOR-A IAP. Those are deadly when the weather is bad in that area. The routing from the north onto the KBIH VOR/DME-B is far more forgiving. I just don't know where I would want to take on the Sierras in a light aircraft when the GMN/LHS area is iced up and IMC. |
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#60
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Could you please provide the routing for 8000 from PA to AK and for 6000
from VA to AK. From PA, west to the Rockies. Rock Springs, Wyoming, airport, just slightly above 7,000 msl, was the highest along our route, but the terrain is flat. In mountainous terrain we followed Interstates or major highways; they are built through low, wide, valleys. And they provide a place to land if necessary. Next stop Helena, Montana. Then to Lethbridge, Red Deer, Grande Prairie, and Dawson Creek, Alberta, where the Alaka Highway begins. From there to Fairbanks, Alaska. The highest point on the AK Highway is slightly above 4,000 msl. For different scenery on one trip we went farther west to Spokane, then north up the Okanogan Valley to Kamloops, St. George and Smithers, B.C., then up the Cassier Highway to Watson Lake. From there we followed the Alaska Highway to Whitehorse, then we turned north to Dawson City, Yukon. From there to Fairbanks. Then down to Talkeetna and Anchorage. The scenery, btw, even more spectacular along the Cassiar Highway than along the Alaska Highway. I might be mistaken, but I don't believe we had to get above 8,000 on that trip, either. I can assure you we didn't have to "top any 14,000 foot peaks." Two of us, neither of us midgets, and the required survival gear put us near gross in a PA28-161 Warrior. We couldn't possibly have got to 14,000 msl. vince norris |
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