k9medic
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2018
- Messages
- 931
- Display Name
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ATP-H, CMEL, CSEL, CFI/CFII Airplanes and Helicopters
The other day while flying zoomming along at 7500' with my son at the controls (who is a newly minted PPL and MEL pilot,) we were handed off from one approach to another as we came towards the Bravo. After communicating with the Bravo approach controller, I was given a new altimeter and transponder code but the controller never mentioned the magic words "cleared into the Bravo."
Thanks to a late handoff from the previous approach controller, we were now less than 5nm miles from Bravo airspace with a ground speed of 210kts. My PIC son smartly said "he never cleared us into the Bravo" and began a climb to 10,500'. Unfortunately, with less than 2 minutes remaining before busting the airspace, the climb still would not have kept us from going into the airspace.
I kept waiting for a break in the radio transmissions (a lot of training aircraft evidently forgot it's a push to talk button, not push to think button) occupied the new controller's time. With that, I callled for the controls and executed what basically was a chandelle from a TAS of 175kts.
As I was coming through 10,200' the controller finally got back to me and told me I was now above the Bravo as he transferred me to a new controller. This new controller promptly gave me Bravo clearance and got me back down to 9500' for the transition.
At the end of the day, no violations occured but this was a good reminder for this professional pilot not to assume you are cleared just because you have a discrete code.
You're mileage may vary...
Thanks to a late handoff from the previous approach controller, we were now less than 5nm miles from Bravo airspace with a ground speed of 210kts. My PIC son smartly said "he never cleared us into the Bravo" and began a climb to 10,500'. Unfortunately, with less than 2 minutes remaining before busting the airspace, the climb still would not have kept us from going into the airspace.
I kept waiting for a break in the radio transmissions (a lot of training aircraft evidently forgot it's a push to talk button, not push to think button) occupied the new controller's time. With that, I callled for the controls and executed what basically was a chandelle from a TAS of 175kts.
As I was coming through 10,200' the controller finally got back to me and told me I was now above the Bravo as he transferred me to a new controller. This new controller promptly gave me Bravo clearance and got me back down to 9500' for the transition.
At the end of the day, no violations occured but this was a good reminder for this professional pilot not to assume you are cleared just because you have a discrete code.
You're mileage may vary...