Flying into KJST today in the club 152, controller tells me "Check gear down". Turns out I forgot to retract them after takeoff! I had a pretty good chuckle at that one.
When it's dual use, the controller is required to say that regardless of your gear configuration.
Hmm. Interesting; didn't know they had to do that for non military aircraft. Is there any reason they do this in the military and not the civilian side? Also is it mandatory for the calling aircraft to confirm?
Next time request a low slow pass and have them check for you.
Military controllers do have discretion when it comes to the "check wheels down (twr) or "wheels should be down" (GCA) phraseology. If its obvious the aircraft doesn't have retractable gear, common sense would suggest not to issue the call. We never issued a wheels down check for our local H-46s. We'd get the typical "down and welded" if we did.
I had no idea that military controllers say that. Now I really want to know how the Hawker Hunter pilot did a gear up at PT. Mugu last year.
I'm not seeing that discretion.
2−1−24. WHEELS DOWN CHECK
USA/USAF/USN
Remind aircraft to check wheels down on each
approach unless the pilot has previously reported
wheels down for that approach.
NOTE−
The intent is solely to remind the pilot to lower the wheels,
not to place responsibility on the controller.
a. Tower must issue the wheels down check at an
appropriate place in the pattern.
PHRASEOLOGY−
CHECK WHEELS DOWN.
b. Approach/arrival control, GCA must issue the
wheels down check as follows:
1. To aircraft conducting ASR, PAR, or radar
monitored approaches, before the aircraft starts
descent on final approach.
2. To aircraft conducting instrument approaches
and remaining on the radar facility’s frequency,
before the aircraft passes the outer marker/final
approach fix.
PHRASEOLOGY−
WHEELS SHOULD BE DOWN.
In my experience, with the exception of the AF, the other services tend to use some common sense.I flew UH-60s for 12 yrs at Army facilities and NEVER once got a wheels down check. Occasionally I got it at other military branch facilities who didn't know any better though.
Don't they mail you a bill?
Well, APN gave me that on my long student XC in a 172. I suppose it was required even by common sense, as they couldn't have known for sure that it wasn't a Cutlass.
I think that was before I'd heard of "down and welded".
That's actually the only time I've been told to check gear down. Haven't been to a dual use facility since.
In my experience, with the exception of the AF, the other services tend to use some common sense.
There seems to be no room for that in the Air Force/ANG.
But be sure to check this before replying.You just reply down and welded,
Sometimes they forget/make mistakes. When the C-17 gear-upped in AFG, the investigation noted that the tower controller failed to issue the 'check wheels down'.
Because it's the military.Hmm. Interesting; didn't know they had to do that for non military aircraft. Is there any reason they do this in the military and not the civilian side?
It is for the military aircraft (or at least both the Navy and Air Force when I was flying in them) -- they'd keep asking until you said it. Not sure what their rule is when talking to civilian aircraft.Also is it mandatory for the calling aircraft to confirm?
My buddy Al Reed was an IP in F-111's out of Cannon back in the 1970's and was in the right seat with a new pilot out for some PAR's somewhere they did a lot of controller training. Got the usual "be advised this approach is being conducted by a student controller under direct supervision from a fully qualified controller." Al keyed the mike and replied, "Well, this approach is being flown by a student pilot under the direct supervision of a fully qualified instructor."Yeah AF is parculiar in some ways. I did a PAR once for a flight of two F-16s out of Shaw. I gave them the usual "Beaufort student final controller, how do you hear me?" immediately lead requested a qualified controller. My monitor unplugged me and literally kicked my chair aside. Not sure why he needed a qualified controller but whatever.
Don't care what the .65 says.
The discretion is common sense.
Does it make sense to issue a wheels down to a skids aircraft?
Are military controllers even required to know which aircraft have skids and which ones don't?
I flew UH-60s for 12 yrs at Army facilities and NEVER once got a wheels down check. Occasionally I got it at other military branch facilities who didn't know any better though.
Then you're unfit for ATC.
There is no discretion.
Irrelevant.
No.
Right. Those that followed the book didn't know any better.
Steven, you were never a military controller and you sure weren't a military pilot. You're experience is strictly related to working FAA at GRB. I suggest you stick with that.
Seriously, the military has a lot lower experience levels in very expensive airplanes than the major airlines, and that's a recipe for mistakes. At USAF and Navy bases, there is even a "wheels watch" sitting at the end of the runway with a radio and a flare gun in case someone reaches short final with no wheels (or skids, for the AH/UH-1's) showing.
Giant Killer...Oh how I hated them.
I don't know whether that is the place that the newest guys go to, but yeah, they are bad. Pretty much same deal with Sealord down south or Beaver on the west coast.
We had it at Whidbey when I was there in the 1970's, but things may have changed in the last 40 years.I'll agree with all of the above as a whole, but I have never seen a wheels watch anywhere other than training command bases (at least on the USN side).
They were in the 1980's when I was flying at Cannon and Upper Heyford, but again, things may have changed in the last 30 years.Is the AF doing that with normal operational units?
The SOF was a lot more than a "book reader" in my day. He (no she's then in fighters) was generally a major or L/C (sometimes a very senior captain), the direct representative of the Deputy Wing Commander for Operations, in charge of all flying operations, and had considerable authority over what went on.I am aware of the SOF, but I was under the impression that he/she was more of a book reader in nature than something like this.
Flying into KJST today in the club 152, controller tells me "Check gear down". Turns out I forgot to retract them after takeoff! I had a pretty good chuckle at that one.
I made a fuel stop at JST last August and there was no landing fee. It might be only for commercial ops or only for twins.