GMascelli
En-Route
You like calling them tourist…don’t you?
Yep, I do!
You like calling them tourist…don’t you?
I think some of the far out announcing is from faster commercial pilots basically saying get out of my way, not taking responsibility otherwise.
"Any other traffic please advise".
Self‐Announce Position and/or Intentions
- General. Self‐announce is a procedure whereby pilots broadcast their position or intended flight activity or ground operation on the designated CTAF. This procedure is used primarily at airports which do not have an FSS on the airport. The self‐announce procedure should also be used if a pilot is unable to communicate with the FSS on the designated CTAF. Pilots stating, “Traffic in the area, please advise” is not a recognized Self-Announce Position and/or Intention phrase and should not be used under any condition.
I have wondered the same thing, telling us the color is just one more word to clog the radio!I’m still trying to figure out where the whole using plane color on CTAF became a thing. Flew for years no one used color, the. One day late 2000s peoI do ple started using color. Which is fine if you have a yellow cub, or a an all read plane. But seriously when 6 white Cessna are in the pattern, why?
I’m still trying to figure out where the whole using plane color on CTAF became a thing. Flew for years no one used color, the. One day late 2000s people started using color. Which is fine if you have a yellow cub, or a an all read plane. But seriously when 6 white Cessna are in the pattern, why?
I've never heard of that. Not sure that matters - if someone says "I'm 5 miles to the East at XXXX feet" the color of the plane won't change things. I'll not run into a red plane, but I have something against yellow planes?I’m still trying to figure out where the whole using plane color on CTAF became a thing. Flew for years no one used color, the. One day late 2000s people started using color. Which is fine if you have a yellow cub, or a an all read plane. But seriously when 6 white Cessna are in the pattern, why?
I don't give colors but sometimes I add "experimental" to my calls. Habit I guess as ATC needs to know that when I talk to them. Shouldn't matter at all to another pilot ...
Yup….exactly. That’s what I did….but I was just within gear speed.I've always based my calls based on minutes, not miles. I'll give my distance in miles, but make the call 5 minutes out.
I think there's a place for each of them. Time is useful if you're 10 miles out because looking for you is often a waste of time and can be distracting because of that. Distance is useful when you are close to the pattern because it gives the observer more information about where to look.Seriously time makes more sense to announce.
Yup I called out landmarks on my latter calls…the bridge…then the golf course.
Maybe if your Airport is flat and unobstructed, but that's not the case here. If someone is at the fuel farm and taxiing back toward the FBO, I like to know so I don't cause a jam on the taxiway, especially if I'm coming out of the south hangars and someone just landed and will be turning down the same taxiway.and anybody nearby on the ground can see me moving.
Sounds like they're making good use of the frequency to me. I like when people make position calls so I can keep good mental awareness of everyone's location. Now, the one's who make position calls and report an incorrect location/direction are the ones you really should be concerned about!Why do some pilots feel compelled to make constant position calls on busy CTAF frequencies several miles out?
Not always, and instead of announcing "clear of the active" you simply announce "clear of 19" to indicate which way you just landed. The guy that's 10 miles out can use that information to plan an entry to the pattern. That's especially true since there's no such thing as an "active" at a non towered field.I never saw the point of announcing before taxiing. People in the air don't care, and anybody nearby on the ground can see me moving.
Sounds like they're making good use of the frequency to me. I like when people make position calls so I can keep good mental awareness of everyone's location. Now, the one's who make position calls and report an incorrect location/direction are the ones you really should be concerned about!
EVERYONE is suddenly NORDO, just like in the 1920s, when the regulations and procedures were written . . .I’m trying to listen and locate visually the guy who is next to land to see if I have room to depart. But when he tries to make his call, there is a massive sidetone (two calling at once) which then becomes a dude making a long winded call from 15 miles out. Someone calls ‘blocked’ and Mr 15 miler launches again with his long winded report. Guy on final still can’t get a word in.
I get that, and that's just poor airmanship. Probably has a wet ticket in his pocket.I want you to reread what I’ve posted on this thread and then tell me that you think people blindly making position reports 15 miles out without any consideration or situational awareness of the communications going on in/near the pattern is a GOOD use of the frequency.
Maybe I didn’t make it clear, but the real issue here is people who are conditioned to make calls without listening or having any SA on what others are doing.
Here’s a scenario that actually happened yesterday (and prompted my original post):
I’m holding short at AVX, waiting to depart. There is an aircraft on the 45, an aircraft on downwind and one on base nearing turn to final.
I’m trying to listen and locate visually the guy who is next to land to see if I have room to depart. But when he tries to make his call, there is a massive sidetone (two calling at once) which then becomes a dude making a long winded call from 15 miles out. Someone calls ‘blocked’ and Mr 15 miler launches again with his long winded report. Guy on final still can’t get a word in.
That’s my beef here. Pilots with zero SA who think that they are helping when they aren’t.
Your ire is misdirected. It's not that he called 15 miles out, it's that he can't say "[plane] 1-5 out, landing [runway] Catalina," and instead has to give a soliloquy. Would have happened if he was 10 or 5 out as well.I want you to reread what I’ve posted on this thread and then tell me that you think people blindly making position reports 15 miles out without any consideration or situational awareness of the communications going on in/near the pattern is a GOOD use of the frequency.
Maybe I didn’t make it clear, but the real issue here is people who are conditioned to make calls without listening or having any SA on what others are doing.
Here’s a scenario that actually happened yesterday (and prompted my original post):
I’m holding short at AVX, waiting to depart. There is an aircraft on the 45, an aircraft on downwind and one on base nearing turn to final.
I’m trying to listen and locate visually the guy who is next to land to see if I have room to depart. But when he tries to make his call, there is a massive sidetone (two calling at once) which then becomes a dude making a long winded call from 15 miles out. Someone calls ‘blocked’ and Mr 15 miler launches again with his long winded report. Guy on final still can’t get a word in.
That’s my beef here. Pilots with zero SA who think that they are helping when they aren’t.
should not
Exactly, it is the new approved way to say ATITAPA. It is much more useful as it actually tells the pattern traffic what you intend to do, your location, and about how much time we have before we need to worry about you, and you don’t have all six airplanes in the pattens stepping over each other if they really did respond to the ATITAPA request.I normally announce 10 miles out which is inline with FAA guidance. My intent is twofold: 1. to make my intentions known to those in the pattern, and 2. If I don’t hear anything after switching to CTAF as a way to solicit a response akin to asking ATITAPA without actually saying ATITAPA.
Did the new restaurant move in yet? Are they renovating or just moving in? Hungry pilots want to knowYup….exactly. That’s what I did….but I was just within gear speed.
No nuth'n. It's sitting there empty. Very disappointing.Did the new restaurant move in yet? Are they renovating or just moving in? Hungry pilots want to know
Like the guy who reports 15 miles out, for XX runway, will overfly the field at YY altitude, then descent, and run to enter the 45 to downwing for the XX runway (which he already said).Can’t fault the 15 mile guy for making a call. Could see fault if was excessively long I suppose - which has nothing to do with distance.
My CFI taught me to never use tail number, he said if they should never be close enough to read your tail number. I don’t use colors either, just type and position. The type isn’t so they will be able to visually identify me, but realize I’m going to be faster than a typical trainer.
Of course you can't read it. You also likely can't see every plane in the pattern either. The number allows you to visualize where they are if you can't see them. Cessna 123 vs Cessna 789. You likely can't see color at the other end of the pattern either, which is why I find "white Cessna" pretty useless.My CFI taught me to never use tail number, he said if they should never be close enough to read your tail number. I don’t use colors either, just type and position. The type isn’t so they will be able to visually identify me, but realize I’m going to be faster than a typical trainer.
So two similar sounding pilots in the same type on the radio only calling out the type wouldn't cause any confusion at all. At least with the tail number you can put a mental picture together.
"Cirrus Downwind 24"
followed immediately by
"Cirrus Base 24"
Sounds like I shoudn't expect a Cirrus on downwind - not to say I shouldn't be looking, but the following...
"Cirrus 345 downwind 24"
followed by
"Cirrus 789 base 24."
Ah, two different Cirri , Cirruses, Circus (?) in the pattern.
When I am the only Comanche in the vicinity, after the first call of the tail number I will only say Comanche. But if there are more than 1, I'm calling at least the last 3.
thats when i reply, "thats great, but my screen shows n numbers not colors!'I’m still trying to figure out where the whole using plane color on CTAF became a thing. Flew for years no one used color, the. One day late 2000s people started using color. Which is fine if you have a yellow cub, or a an all read plane. But seriously when 6 white Cessna are in the pattern, why?