Larry in TN
En-Route
Every possible situation can't be anticipated and defined in the regulations. When the controller needs to give further instructions he will give them. There is nothing preventing that as there would be in a situation with a loss of communication.Which leads me to ask: is there no FAA interpretation letter on this problem so far? (I am not good at Googling such stuff, I'll have somebody here do it for me )
It is not a clearance limit; that remains the destination airport. Entering a hold at that fix in busy airspace is the last thing that a controller will be expecting or want. In most cases, you'll be turn right into the path of the aircraft that is behind you in the sequence for the approach.I'd say it's poor phraseology by not saying "cleared to" but I'd still call it a clearance limit.