LongRoadBob
Cleared for Takeoff
with so much to learn, sometimes I ignore nagging feelings that I don't get it, and just memorize some things. Like signal lamps. I got it wrong I think on the written, a blinding green. I thought it meant "cleared to land" but that is solid green. Still the answer choices as I recall weren't right either. On the exam the other viable choice was "come in for landing and taxi to ramp" (roughly translated)
So I went through signal lamps, and blinking green makes no sense to me.
When flashed at a plane in the air, it means "return for landing, to be followed by a solid green when cleared to land" if to a plane on the ground it means "cleared for taxi" but in Norwegian they have it as "depending on whether after landing or before takeoff, taxi to park, or wait position")
So...the "return for landing", when and how would that ever be used? For one thing, planes most often takeoff and do left turn out, or right, but you no longer would be in a position to see a flashing green light from behind you at the tower? Also, why exactly would they be instructing you to return for landing? Presumably you have lost your receiver. But it seems phrased as an instruction, which seems to be the pilots responsibility.
I don't get it.
So I went through signal lamps, and blinking green makes no sense to me.
When flashed at a plane in the air, it means "return for landing, to be followed by a solid green when cleared to land" if to a plane on the ground it means "cleared for taxi" but in Norwegian they have it as "depending on whether after landing or before takeoff, taxi to park, or wait position")
So...the "return for landing", when and how would that ever be used? For one thing, planes most often takeoff and do left turn out, or right, but you no longer would be in a position to see a flashing green light from behind you at the tower? Also, why exactly would they be instructing you to return for landing? Presumably you have lost your receiver. But it seems phrased as an instruction, which seems to be the pilots responsibility.
I don't get it.