Depends on the towered airport. Some require you use CD, others rather you make your request with ground. ATIS will often provide a clue. At a Class C or B airport, typically yes...
Is it frowned upon to use clearance delivery when departing VFR?
What would you use it for when departing VFR?
Flight following, I've done it often. Get your squawk and departure freq before taxi.
But, you already knew that...
Depends on the towered airport. Some require you use CD, others rather you make your request with ground. ATIS will often provide a clue. At a Class C or B airport, typically yes. Class D, typically no (with many exceptions).
As far as using the CD remote frequency at a non-towered field, it seems most would rather you just make your contact in the air (Washington DC SFRA excepted, of course).
I have often wondered this myself. I trained in and currently fly out of KCID (class C). My instructor told me to contact ground for my initial VFR clearance so that is what I do. One time, ground requested that I contact clearance first. I haven't flown into another class C. I would like to know what the appropriate action is for VFR flights.
So lets say you are departing an airport with class E airspace, right outside the perimeter of a class B airspace with intentions to obtain a VFR flight following through the class B after departure. Would it be alright to go ahead and contact Clearance Delivery before departing the class E?
So lets say you are departing an airport with class E airspace, right outside the perimeter of a class B airspace with intentions to obtain a VFR flight following through the class B after departure. Would it be alright to go ahead and contact Clearance Delivery before departing the class E?
Some will allow you to do that but most prefer you just take care of that in the air. They can't give you a clearance until they've radar identified you anyway, so you might as well do it in the air. CD at a remote field is intended for use by IFR traffic that is holding up airspace in the class E for either a release or an approach.
Depends on the airport. At a Class B/C airport, it's pretty much mandatory to get a squawk/freg before taxi (ATIS will normally tell you whether to call Ground or CD for that). At a Class D/E/G towered airport without a collocated TRACON, if you want flight following, you can ask CD (if there is one, Ground if there isn't) for a squawk/freq before taxi; odds are they'll tell you just to call the TRACON/Center once airborne, but there's no harm in asking.Flight following, I've done it often. Get your squawk and departure freq before taxi.
You can ask GND/CD about a squawk/freq for flight following, but ATC will not normally take care of opening a VFR flight plan -- that generally must be done by calling FSS yourself.It just seemed logical and courteous to me to contact CD before departure so that I could have my transponder set, flight plan open, etc.
You can ask GND/CD about a squawk/freq for flight following, but ATC will not normally take care of opening a VFR flight plan -- that generally must be done by calling FSS yourself.
That's commonly done via ground.
It's also commonly done via CD. Your point?
That's commonly done via ground.
Yup, but procedures vary all over the map.
A counterexample is KCOS. Contact CD on engine start, make the departure request, contact ground for taxi clearance, contact tower for takeoff clearance.
KOAK works like you say. CD is for IFR only and the departure request is made with Ground.
KLVK (Class D) uses Ground only for taxi clearance (including the parallels -- most of the Class D's with significant training cede those to Tower), and departure requests are made at the last instant with Tower.
Yup, but procedures vary all over the map.
A counterexample is KCOS. Contact CD on engine start, make the departure request, contact ground for taxi clearance, contact tower for takeoff clearance.
What would you use it for when departing VFR?
Class C does not provide separation services for VFR traffic. It only keeps it separate from IFR traffic.
Some time back, I was departing Houston Hobby VFR and called ground without calling CD first -- major ass-chewing. Still don't understand the reasoning.
It's always great fun to read all the answers (and petty sniping) posted in response to questions like this, but your best answer will come from calling the tower or TRACON that you're specifically concerned about. I call an ATC facility at least once or twice a year with a question and without exception get good information cheerfully and patiently delivered.Is it frowned upon to use clearance delivery when departing VFR?
There is nothing to be nervous about. You just have to do the research beforehand. Some Class C's want you call CD before ground, some do not care. It's not the end of the worldI read these discussions about clearance delivery and people having to wait several minutes to depart and things of that nature and it makes me a bit nervous about going somewhere busier. A busy day at KEAU means I might be #2 to land or have to extend a downwind or something.
There is nothing to be nervous about. You just have to do the research beforehand. Some Class C's want you call CD before ground, some do not care. It's not the end of the world
Not in KABQ. Ground is only for taxi clearances.That's commonly done via ground.
What would you use it for when departing VFR?
Yup, but procedures vary all over the map.
What I do is listen to ATIS (if there is one). If it says "VFR flights contact clearance delivery prior to taxi," I do it. If it doesn't say that, but I want flight following and there is a published CD freq, I call CD and make the request. Sometimes they give me a squawk/freg, sometimes they say "Call the TRACON after takeoff." If I want flight following and there is no CD freq, I make that as part of my request to Ground; sometimes they give me a squawk/freg, sometimes they say "Call the TRACON after takeoff."
And that's how I've been handling it for 40-some years with no problems.
Standard procedure at PVD (class C) for VFR departures was to contact CD first to request a clearance to depart. They would provide a squawk and initial departure instructions and then pass you over to ground.
Yes Steven, we've been through this before with you. You say it isn't required, but many of us who operate out of several Class C airports around the country know that ATC there expects VFR pilots to contact CD first.The only clearance required to depart VFR at PVD is a takeoff clearance which is usually not issued by CD or ground.