Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
TheSonntag wrote:But for Charlie and Delta, you must contact ATC, but you can still enter the airspace unless they explicitly tell you to stay outside. Have I understood that correct?
IAHFLYR wrote:Yes you understood correctly however, there are now ADS-B and transponder requirements as well as maintaining two way radio communications with the Tower and or Approach Control when you are within C and D airspace.
bluecrew wrote:TheSonntag wrote:But for Charlie and Delta, you must contact ATC, but you can still enter the airspace unless they explicitly tell you to stay outside. Have I understood that correct?
N1120A is correct, there is one nuance of US ATC and it comes down to grammar though too. The regulation to enter C and D is 2 way radio communication, which means "N150PF, Naples tower, stand by," is totally legal all day to enter the Naples delta, but "aircraft calling Naples tower, standby," is used frequently at D's to prevent aircraft from entering the airspace.
It's really easy to miss the distinction, not sure how it is done in Europe as I've never flown there, but it struck me as a really easy way to get violated if you're not used to hearing it.
LH707330 wrote:It's also a good idea to call them up if you plan to fly over the top. A local airport here has a D going up to 2500 with a B shelf starting at 3000. Someone flew through the E at 2700 over the D and tower was not impressed. Technically legal, but poor form.
ArcticFlyer wrote:LH707330 wrote:It's also a good idea to call them up if you plan to fly over the top. A local airport here has a D going up to 2500 with a B shelf starting at 3000. Someone flew through the E at 2700 over the D and tower was not impressed. Technically legal, but poor form.
The tower can be unimpressed all they want; what the pilot did in your scenario was perfectly legal. I think the broader issue is that the airspace surrounding the airport you describe is poorly designed so as to encourage pilots to cram themselves in to a small area of the sky. Perhaps the Class D should go all the way up to 3,000 feet to eliminate the option, but until it does the tower cannot exercise control over aircraft not within its airspace.
I've actually observed the opposite, where an aircraft overflying the ceiling of Class D by a few hundred feet called the tower (presumably as a courtesy) and the controller said something to the extend of, "What are you calling me for?" I guess it all depends on where you are!
GalaxyFlyer wrote:My best tale is KTEB tower, on a visual approach, asking another, non-local plane to report the Holland Tunnel. “It’s underwater, sir” was the reply.
r6russian wrote:I love watching youtube videos of ATC recordings and the difference being local makes vs being from elsewhere. Main thing is 4 digit flight numbers spoken in street language vs official language. AAL 2550 pronounced American twentyfive fifty vs American two five five zero
You almost have to be a native American speaker to understand who theyre talking to, and if youre not, you still need to be a native american speaker to understand who theyre speaking to. Jfk ATC videos prove how often miscommunication happens
ArcticFlyer wrote:The tower can be unimpressed all they want; what the pilot did in your scenario was perfectly legal. I think the broader issue is that the airspace surrounding the airport you describe is poorly designed so as to encourage pilots to cram themselves in to a small area of the sky. Perhaps the Class D should go all the way up to 3,000 feet to eliminate the option, but until it does the tower cannot exercise control over aircraft not within its airspace.
I've actually observed the opposite, where an aircraft overflying the ceiling of Class D by a few hundred feet called the tower (presumably as a courtesy) and the controller said something to the extend of, "What are you calling me for?" I guess it all depends on where you are!
Starlionblue wrote:This is classic inconsistent ATC in the US in my experience. You just can't win. I've been yelled at in one state for doing exactly what ATC in the state where I learned to fly would expect of me.
Flying an airliner internationally, one of the places where we have to be especially alert is the US. Controllers tend to pepper their instructions with non-standard verbiage for no good reason.
r6russian wrote:I love watching youtube videos of ATC recordings and the difference being local makes vs being from elsewhere. Main thing is 4 digit flight numbers spoken in street language vs official language. AAL 2550 pronounced American twentyfive fifty vs American two five five zero
GalaxyFlyer wrote:It’s not easy for non-local Pilot to find the Holland Tunnel. If you’re local, the entrances may be familiar.
I had a similar deal, night arrival into Las Vegas from Brasilia, IIRC. ATC asks us to report the Stratosphere hotel in sight. Well, there’s a quadrillion lights all on hotel buildings and I’m supposed to recognize a particular hotel at night, from 10,000’.
LH707330 wrote:
I don't hear as much slang from controllers, mostly from pilots. Then again, I've only flown in the US, so maybe what I consider normal is way out of ICAO spec.
Starlionblue wrote:r6russian wrote:I love watching youtube videos of ATC recordings and the difference being local makes vs being from elsewhere. Main thing is 4 digit flight numbers spoken in street language vs official language. AAL 2550 pronounced American twentyfive fifty vs American two five five zero
You almost have to be a native American speaker to understand who theyre talking to, and if youre not, you still need to be a native american speaker to understand who theyre speaking to. Jfk ATC videos prove how often miscommunication happens
The same thing goes for runway numbers. "Three four left" and "zero seven left" in the rest of the world vs "thirtyfour left" and "seven left" in North America. As usual, the ICAO standard is clearer.
US controllers at major airports often seem to be in a rush. I don't get it. There is just as busy airspace in the rest of the world where controllers speak slowly and clearly, while getting as much done. Maybe if US controllers didn't have to repeat themselves so often due to misunderstandings, they could afford the luxury of not rushing.
N1120A wrote:Once again, it is nearly always the best practice in the US to be participating in the ATC system. It costs you nothing and can save you and everyone around you a ton of headaches. Unless you're flying something without an electrical system, there is just no excuse to not have a code in your transponder and your radio tuned to the local center or approach.Starlionblue wrote:r6russian wrote:I love watching youtube videos of ATC recordings and the difference being local makes vs being from elsewhere. Main thing is 4 digit flight numbers spoken in street language vs official language. AAL 2550 pronounced American twentyfive fifty vs American two five five zero
You almost have to be a native American speaker to understand who theyre talking to, and if youre not, you still need to be a native american speaker to understand who theyre speaking to. Jfk ATC videos prove how often miscommunication happens
The same thing goes for runway numbers. "Three four left" and "zero seven left" in the rest of the world vs "thirtyfour left" and "seven left" in North America. As usual, the ICAO standard is clearer.
US controllers at major airports often seem to be in a rush. I don't get it. There is just as busy airspace in the rest of the world where controllers speak slowly and clearly, while getting as much done. Maybe if US controllers didn't have to repeat themselves so often due to misunderstandings, they could afford the luxury of not rushing.
Flight number combining is in the FAA standards handbook and considered best practice in the US. That is actually the controllers and pilots going by the book.
Combining numbers for runways is uncommon in the US, but Super common in Canada (where they make a habit of combining for wind speed as well).
Also, the busiest airspace in the world is in the US, so that the controllers are busier shouldn't be surprising. The US also has excellent radar coverage and that gives controllers the ability to issue vectors to basically everyone instead of relying on clogging some published hold at like 15 levels. Various places have their quirks, like the various London controllers you have to whisper only your flight number to or having to tell ATC what kind of airplane you are as an IFR flight. The US offers pilots and controllers significantly more flexibility to operate safely in complex airspace, instead of the idiocy that is the London TMA.
N1120A wrote:Once again, it is nearly always the best practice in the US to be participating in the ATC system. It costs you nothing and can save you and everyone around you a ton of headaches. Unless you're flying something without an electrical system, there is just no excuse to not have a code in your transponder and your radio tuned to the local center or approach.Starlionblue wrote:r6russian wrote:I love watching youtube videos of ATC recordings and the difference being local makes vs being from elsewhere. Main thing is 4 digit flight numbers spoken in street language vs official language. AAL 2550 pronounced American twentyfive fifty vs American two five five zero
You almost have to be a native American speaker to understand who theyre talking to, and if youre not, you still need to be a native american speaker to understand who theyre speaking to. Jfk ATC videos prove how often miscommunication happens
The same thing goes for runway numbers. "Three four left" and "zero seven left" in the rest of the world vs "thirtyfour left" and "seven left" in North America. As usual, the ICAO standard is clearer.
US controllers at major airports often seem to be in a rush. I don't get it. There is just as busy airspace in the rest of the world where controllers speak slowly and clearly, while getting as much done. Maybe if US controllers didn't have to repeat themselves so often due to misunderstandings, they could afford the luxury of not rushing.
Flight number combining is in the FAA standards handbook and considered best practice in the US. That is actually the controllers and pilots going by the book.
Combining numbers for runways is uncommon in the US, but Super common in Canada (where they make a habit of combining for wind speed as well).
Also, the busiest airspace in the world is in the US, so that the controllers are busier shouldn't be surprising. The US also has excellent radar coverage and that gives controllers the ability to issue vectors to basically everyone instead of relying on clogging some published hold at like 15 levels. Various places have their quirks, like the various London controllers you have to whisper only your flight number to or having to tell ATC what kind of airplane you are as an IFR flight. The US offers pilots and controllers significantly more flexibility to operate safely in complex airspace, instead of the idiocy that is the London TMA.
Starlionblue wrote:LH707330 wrote:
I don't hear as much slang from controllers, mostly from pilots. Then again, I've only flown in the US, so maybe what I consider normal is way out of ICAO spec.
"Out of ICAO spec" indeed. So much this. Pretty much anywhere else in the world, standard phraseology is used almost exclusively. It really helps in places where the controllers (and pilots) have a thick accent.
What US controllers might want to keep in mind is that standard phraseology also helps pilots who don't have (American) English as a first language. There are myriad YouTube videos of US controllers berating some poor foreign pilot for "not getting it". That foreign pilot, who is probably already pretty punchy after a 12-15 hour flight, now has to deal with rapid-fire non-standard local phraseology in a language he may not be completely fluent in. In contrast, said pilot can fly to Australia or the UK and communicate with perfect clarity because even though he may have a hard time with the accent, the phrases are what he expects to hear.
This may be a pet peeve of mine.
I try to keep my comms standard, as short as possible, and clearly enunciated, even if the guy on the other end is in a rush. Example, instead of "xxx delivery, BigJet123. Could you let me know of any delays tonight to xxx?", say "xxx delivery, BigJet123. Any delays expected for our departure?" The latter is much clearer for a non-English speaker, and more concise.
I have many comms pet peeves, one of them being pilots who read back everything and clutter the airwaves. Example: "Cleared xxx arrival, expect runway xyz". You don't need to read back the runway bit since it's not an instruction. Or "turn right heading xxx, intercept the localiser runway xyz, report established." You don't need to repeat "report established". At most you might say "wilco" to that part. Or responding "standing by" to "standby". The instruction is "standby" so you don't need to say anything. The controller is trying to get something else done.
Keep it short, clear, and precise, using standard phrases, and let's stay safe out there.
But I digress...![]()
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#getoffmylawn
LH707330 wrote:Starlionblue wrote:LH707330 wrote:
I don't hear as much slang from controllers, mostly from pilots. Then again, I've only flown in the US, so maybe what I consider normal is way out of ICAO spec.
"Out of ICAO spec" indeed. So much this. Pretty much anywhere else in the world, standard phraseology is used almost exclusively. It really helps in places where the controllers (and pilots) have a thick accent.
What US controllers might want to keep in mind is that standard phraseology also helps pilots who don't have (American) English as a first language. There are myriad YouTube videos of US controllers berating some poor foreign pilot for "not getting it". That foreign pilot, who is probably already pretty punchy after a 12-15 hour flight, now has to deal with rapid-fire non-standard local phraseology in a language he may not be completely fluent in. In contrast, said pilot can fly to Australia or the UK and communicate with perfect clarity because even though he may have a hard time with the accent, the phrases are what he expects to hear.
This may be a pet peeve of mine.
I try to keep my comms standard, as short as possible, and clearly enunciated, even if the guy on the other end is in a rush. Example, instead of "xxx delivery, BigJet123. Could you let me know of any delays tonight to xxx?", say "xxx delivery, BigJet123. Any delays expected for our departure?" The latter is much clearer for a non-English speaker, and more concise.
I have many comms pet peeves, one of them being pilots who read back everything and clutter the airwaves. Example: "Cleared xxx arrival, expect runway xyz". You don't need to read back the runway bit since it's not an instruction. Or "turn right heading xxx, intercept the localiser runway xyz, report established." You don't need to repeat "report established". At most you might say "wilco" to that part. Or responding "standing by" to "standby". The instruction is "standby" so you don't need to say anything. The controller is trying to get something else done.
Keep it short, clear, and precise, using standard phrases, and let's stay safe out there.
But I digress...![]()
![]()
#getoffmylawn
Yeah, some of the JFK audios are painful to listen to. There you've got accent and non-standard. Hell, I even have a rough time with some of those accents.
I wonder how much of it comes down to military-trained vs civil-trained controllers. I hear a lot of "report established in the hold," although the AIM tells you to report reaching the hold. Same thing with "I got two VFR targets for you, 11 o clock 5000 and 10 o clock 6000, report in sight."
Regarding the runway readback, isn't that so that both know what the plan is if you go lost comms?
In my area, the intercept readback usually includes the heading, something like "Right heading xxx to intercept." Decent blend of concision and information. I hear people getting asked to read back that heading if they skip it.
I'm with you on the "stand by" one. That one drives me up the wall. Same with "Approach, 123 with you at 3000." If they can hear you, they know you're with them....
My biggest pet peeve is misspelling "localizer" with an "s." Just because there's a little island off the coast of Europe that does it, doesn't mean we all should