RussR
En-Route
Did you work in a Tower in the US? I know you do now, but when you were in the AF? If so I'm assuming you had a CTO Certificate.
I have a CTO cert from my time at a USAF tower, yes.
Did you work in a Tower in the US? I know you do now, but when you were in the AF? If so I'm assuming you had a CTO Certificate.
I didn't know you was a Controller. I had asked Timbeck2 that. Anyway, did you go FAA as a Controller when you got out?I have a CTO cert from my time at a USAF tower, yes.
I didn't know you was a Controller. I had asked Timbeck2 that. Anyway, did you go FAA as a Controller when you got out?
Did you work in a Tower in the US? I know you do now, but when you were in the AF? If so I'm assuming you had a CTO Certificate.
Oh I remember my last aircraft. Was an FAA Flight Check Hawker doing a tactical (TPN22) PAR at Miramar. I was the only one in GCA qualified on the TPN-22 so I hopped in the ops truck and went across the runway to help out. Think they did three approaches. Two regular and one no gyro. Last approach I shipped them to SOCAL and he came back with “those were the best PARs we’ve ever gotten.” Probably just being polite but that didn’t keep me from bragging about it when I got back to the radar room.
Edit:Well technically I guess my last transmission to an aircraft was a PAR I gave around 2003. Since I wasn’t a controller at the time I won’t go into details on that.
I started out on an AN/FPN-63 working side by side with the FAA controllers (Tucson TRACON is located on Davis Monthan AFB) which was raw radar and you had to align the scope with a tiny screwdriver. You didn't get your rating unless you could do a no-gyro surveillance approach with recommended altitudes. We later got the TPN-22 which was located on the 5th floor of the tower. We had it for several years but then it started to break and parts for it were hard to find. It finally wasn't feasible to keep it running and was replaced with an ILS.
That sounds like you might mean the pink Air Traffic Control Specialist cards. I was wondering if they issued the Airman Certificate. Like this
Now I understand how my near collision happened just south of FLO VOR. I was talking to the civil ATC, the Marine jet was talking to the Marine radar, and they civil and military were NOT talking to each other.
I was at 5500 feet, just south of the VOR, and the jet came up in a 30 degree bank and climbing at 300 knots. He passed LESS than 100 yards in front of us, we could see the pilots head clearly, and he was looking straight ahead.
My controller apologized, said it came onto his screen one turn of the radar before it passed me, and the blips did merge, glad I was OK. He gave me the speed, and current altitude, but advised that I keep a close watch, as it was continuing to turn, and might make a second pass. Yes, we did experience turbulence.
We did watch, and he dove back down close to the ground, and departed south.
I was on the centerline of V 3, and no MOA was depicted on the chart at that time.
To what degree should that Marine pilot have been advised by any military radar service or controller?
Yes and I have three of those. I only had one pink cardThat sounds like you might mean the pink Air Traffic Control Specialist cards. I was wondering if they issued the Airman Certificate. Like this
View attachment 99431
I was on the centerline of V 3, and no MOA was depicted on the chart at that time.
To what degree should that Marine pilot have been advised by any military radar service or controller?
I’ve always thought VR routes should have a published CTAF so civ aircraft in the area can deconflict.
Inverted?
Given the length of them you'd need a bunch of freqs along the way. We often flew VR routes hundreds of miles long at 500 kts and 200' so mostly below everyone else. We did always check on the route with Flight Service with entry and exit points and times though so I suppose if were in an area with a lot of routes converging you could check with them for potential traffic. Getting off the route I'd use whatever the nearest departure freq was to pick up my clearance. I suspect everyone these days has VHF and UHF in the jets but for the first half of my career we were pretty much all UHF.
Alerts can go both ways. We always checked NOTAMs for the route but coming over a ridge in the Cascades inverted to find a rogue helo logging operation in my face was bit sporty.
Inverted?
Ah. Makes sense. I had this vision of ya flyin the whole thing upside down.Much more pleasant to cross a ridge and pull positive g's than push and go negative so with any descent planned on the other side of the ridge roll and pull is normal.
From the VR-1355 near you. We'd usually enter @ point D just north of Goldendale (S20) and my personal best time back to NAS Whidbey was 26 minutes (clean wing so no airspeed limitations in an EA-6B) Yea, it was a fun job for 20 years.
That's what MOA's are for. They're usually talking to someone on the ground. May even be someone whose known as a Controller. But it's not ATC by definition. ATC keeps airplanes under ATC 'control' outta the MOA. I don't know if you can get them, but a UHF scanner could pick up some chit chat in the MOA.I guess here is another dumb civilian question I have after reading these responses. For military aircraft, are they allowed to operate without ATC services, aka squawk VFR and just fly around, or are they always under ATC control except when operating in special use airspace? I know the ones I hear daily on the scanner talking to Center always seem to be essentially on an IFR flight plan. Can a fighter just be buzzing around at 350+ knots below 10,000 feet without talking to anyone?
Yes. I took a ride on a flight of 3 F16s. Tower cleared us for takeoff, departure radar id’ed us and switched us to range control while we dropped bombs. When we exited the range they switched us back to ATC for a bit till we started the low level high speed bit where they were just talking internally.Can a fighter just be buzzing around at 350+ knots below 10,000 feet without talking to anyone?
Yeah. Terminal radar isn't going to be very much better at those altitudes either. While we're here, ADSB surveillance source would change that. Are you guys using ADSB feed routinely yet?Yes. I took a ride on a flight of 3 F16s. Tower cleared us for takeoff, departure radar id’ed us and switched us to range control while we dropped bombs. When we exited the range they switched us back to ATC for a bit till we started the low level high speed bit where they were just talking internally.
Center radar is going to have problems tracking targets down at 300-500 feet AGL going over 400 kts.
We have so many radar sites tied into fusion, ADS-B means nothing for us. We haven’t been briefed on how/when/if we are ever going to use it. Right now it’s just used by the powers to id violators. I’m guessing in the mountains/oceanic areas it’s helpful.Yeah. Terminal radar isn't going to be very much better at those altitudes either. While we're here, ADSB surveillance source would change that. Are you guys using ADSB feed routinely yet?
For military aircraft, are they allowed to operate without ATC services, aka squawk VFR and just fly around
Some background on this which I know you know.. It's what is called a Function Code. There are others. They are usually assigned by ATC. 4000 is one that may be assigned or done by the pilot if operating without an assigned code as in #2 below.Yes. Aircraft executing rapid altitude changes should squawk 4000 instead of 1200.
I guess here is another dumb civilian question I have after reading these responses. For military aircraft, are they allowed to operate without ATC services, aka squawk VFR and just fly around, or are they always under ATC control except when operating in special use airspace? I know the ones I hear daily on the scanner talking to Center always seem to be essentially on an IFR flight plan. Can a fighter just be buzzing around at 350+ knots below 10,000 feet without talking to anyone?
And it’s amazing that the FPN-63 is still the mainstay for a lot of bases. TPN-22 digital presentation was far better than the raw radar of the 63 but I’ve heard all the 22s are gone. It’s all ATNAVICS for tactical GCA from what I’ve heard.
I would think it was the other way round. The FPN-63 I used was in the early 90s. We got the 22 late 90s early 2000s, I don’t remember exactly and even then it wasn’t brand new. You know the military, lowest bidder and all. The 22 became more expensive because it broke all the time and parts were hard to come by. We were paying more per year on that thing than it cost to pay for the ILS that replaced it. After thousands of PAR approaches I ran on that thing, I was glad to see it go
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Somalia
Late into my second six-month USS Ranger deployment, we left the Persian Gulf for Somalia and Operation Restore Hope. Nobody knew what we were supposed to do, but we went anyway.
Our missions started simply as a radio relay for the Marines on the ground. Boring stuff. But, a day or two into it we saw that there were literally hundreds of NGO (non-government organization) and military relief airplanes trying to land in Mogadishu all at the same time.
Now that the Americans secured the airport, it was safe to bring in supplies.
It was crazy! Hundreds of airplanes ranging from USAF C-5s to a guy in a Piper Chieftain all converging on a single runway next to the coast.
I was the CICO on the mission and started speaking to my crew. We were going to input an oft-used tactic and modify it for civilian use.
Looking at my RO I said “you start directing airplanes to here,” putting a waypoint on our radar screens. “Stack them 1,000 feet starting a 5,000. Set them up for an approach. Give them push times a few minutes apart.”
Looking at my ACO I said “you keep control of this thing. When one of these guys lands, tell the next to start his approach, then drop the stack down 1,000 feet. Everyone starts their approach at 5,000 feet.”
They got it! We just took charge and began barking orders to the flock of airplanes. Soon we started to sound like New York air traffic control!
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Just like Geezer’s example above, good chance that jet wasn’t talking to anyone. Unless it’s branch specific, I don’t know of any requirement to be up ATC. MTRs being probably the most popular non ATC type of operation. Off shore Warning Areas, they’re usually up FACSFAC (ATC). MOAs, either up ATC or a separate MOA controller. Restricted Areas, they’ll be up range control or ATC. Some R Areas have radar that can see you only a couple hundred feet up and controllers provide FF on the range. Alert Areas, no commo requirement but some areas (Ft Rucker) they have a FF requirement with ATC (Cairns).
Technically Army aircraft have to file IFR for every flight. Bunch of exceptions to that rule though. Lot of Army unit SOPs that dictate being up FF with either ATC or their battalion flight ops (like a FSS). Army also has a flight plan requirement in the NAS (either DoD or FAA/ICAO) or a tac strip if operating solely in SUA.
This is admittedly dated (flew USAF F-111s in '80s and '90s) but we were required to be IFR unless the mission required VFR such as low level training routes. Typically our flight plans were composite with IFR then VFR then back to IFR where the VFR was the low level onto a bombing range. In the US we didn't ever just fly around VFR unless it was on an LLTR or in protected airspace - MOAs and R or Alert Areas. In the UK, we often flew VFR all over the country but the traffic density and rules are quite different.
While its already been mentioned that the E-3 mission probably doesn't support acting as or in support of civilian ATC I also wonder if the Posse Comitatus Act would preclude it.
While its already been mentioned that the E-3 mission probably doesn't support acting as or in support of civilian ATC I also wonder if the Posse Comitatus Act would preclude it.