No, I never said that anywhere in this thread. In fact I haven't mentioned the PHAK at all, and it hasn't been called the FTH in a long time. For what it's worth, the PHAK says the same thing that the AFH says (the 300 foot statement).I thought you said the PHAK and FTH said the same thing, no?
dtuuri
All aircraft approaching to land, in the vicinity of an airport, must make all turns to the left per FAR. Seems no explanation is needed.Does the AIM have to justify and explain every procedure? Is there a section in the AIM explaining why a standard pattern is to the left? No, it just says that it is.
I already corrected the old reference, but thanks for the catch.No, I never said that anywhere in this thread. In fact I haven't mentioned the PHAK at all, and it hasn't been called the FTH in a long time. For what it's worth, the PHAK says the same thing that the AFH says (the 300 foot statement).
Airplane Flying Handbook page 7-4.
Also, AC 90-66A says:
h. Airplanes remaining in the traffic pattern should not commence a turn to the crosswind leg until beyond the departure end of the runway and within 300 feet below traffic pattern altitude, with the pilot ensuring that the turn to downwind leg will be made at the traffic pattern altitude.
See my recent post above.Your statement was that this was all a bunch of opinion. I posted a black-and-white quote from an AC showing that it's fact, not opinion. If you can't accept that what an AC says is fact, I don't know what to tell you.
Don't you have some logbook mistakes you should be hunting down and correcting? Nice penmanship, btw. No pun intended.This dtuuri guy just stirs trouble, ignore him.
Or flown a Cub. You want me to fly a two mile wide pattern at 60?Downwind turn shouldn't be made till your at pattern altitude? It seems a lot of people posting above me have never experienced high density altitude.
All aircraft approaching to land, in the vicinity of an airport, must make all turns to the left per FAR. Seems no explanation is needed.
I'm not warming up to this duel. AFAIK, the AIM has never said the turn from crosswind to downwind should be at pattern altitude, neither before nor after the publication of AC 90-66A. Which has higher priority in your mind, the current AIM or a 24 year old AC which isn't "binding on the public" according to the Advisory Circular Checklist? The AIM has an entire chapter on Airport Operations. If the statement in the AC is valid the author has had plenty of time to update the AIM. On the other hand, climbing straight out to pattern altitude, while more expensive for non-government flyers, would comply with the current AIM also. I just think "within 300 ft." is close enough. I'll hedge that opinion pending the investigation into the Arrow/Luscombe mid-air down in McKinney,Texas though. I'd like to know where the Luscombe began the crosswind.And where is the FAR explained? If you don't like that example, I could think of hundreds more.
Which has higher priority in your mind, the current AIM or a 24 year old AC
They don't say the same thing. They have different meanings. The AIM only specifies the first turn, the AC adds another requirement. That "add-on" mutates the rectangular shape of the pattern, which can't be a good thing.Which has higher priority would only be a concern if they contained conflicting information. They don't.
How?That "add-on" mutates the rectangular shape of the pattern, which can't be a good thing.
Think of it as a station identification break. There's no news on the NTSB website.Silly me. I keep clicking on this thread to see if there's any new news on the Petaluma crash.
You guys almost done here?
They don't say the same thing. They have different meanings. The AIM only specifies the first turn, the AC adds another requirement. That "add-on" mutates the rectangular shape of the pattern, which can't be a good thing.
A Cirrus stall spin thread wouldn't be complete without :