@tspear Here’s a pic of that where they contained Greensboro Approach in Atlanta Centers Flight Data Processing System even though it spans two Centers.From that page (with my emphasis):
Center Surface Boundaries
The provided Air Traffic Control Center (ARTCC) ground level boundary data was created to support FAA's En Route Automation Modernization (ERAM) system. It is made available every 28 Days solely to aid non-FAA Flight Plan system developers and submitters to match the correct ARTCC with off airport points of departure/arrival such as during medivac flights or seaplane flights, when the point of departure/arrival is close to the defined low level ARTCC boundary published on FAA charts. Ground level controlling ARTCC boundaries may not match low level ARTCC boundaries published on FAA charts.
This ground level ARTCC boundary data should not be used for any other purpose than the matching of off airport points of departure/arrival with the corresponding controlling ARTCC for that point on the ground. The corresponding controlling ARTCC for landing facilities (airports/heliports/etc.) can be found in the NASR 28 day subscriber file APT.txt file which can be found at 28-Day NASR Subscription.
Offhand, it sounds like the Surface Boundaries are not the regulatory Center areas, but intended so that there is access to information on which of two adjoining facilities actually cover certain points on the ground which are not airports.
@tspearIf you want a user content file that shows the surface center boundaries, add this file to ForeFlight user content. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wKdCbZClnhHDn8p_qZpqzCbR43CbVAhV/view?usp=share_link
If you want a user content file that shows the surface center boundaries, add this file to ForeFlight user content. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wKdCbZClnhHDn8p_qZpqzCbR43CbVAhV/view?usp=share_link
Well bless your heartsMany of us don't use that crapware.
You also have these little bumps called mountains and the airways generally pass over the lowest available terrain.
But really, while there is plenty about the mountain west that will mess up the flatlanders, the restricted areas aren't that big a deal and won't confuse eastern pilots all that much.
I came to coastal NC from the DC FRZ - yep, the SUA, MOA, etc., constraints make it pretty tight - more so here then the DC are I think.
I am not IR, but have completed the ground school.
Do you have an IFR GPS? If yes why not go direct?
I always liked how the FAA advises (or did) you should do this. But then will never say what the areas ARTCC covers...
Yeah I've literally never filed the fix in each ARTCC area. Its almost always direct, or if I'm going east Direct KELSI->Direct. But I've heard the stories of those busy coasts and their need for routing.
I'm guessing that based on your username, you haven't flown on the East coast much. They loooooooove their airways, especially in the northeast.
I see what you did there. Haven't said "No!" often enough, but catching up lately.Ohio said, "Hail no!" to the victor airways