SixPapaCharlie
May the force be with you
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- Aug 8, 2013
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Sixer
It was kind of fun in a crap your pants sort of way...
It was kind of fun in a crap your pants sort of way...
Oh yes. I become a chatty Kathy when I hear someone report on CTAF they are where I am. That freaks me out.
I've seen this described as the 'cone of risk'. The faster you go, the more likely it is that any collision target is going to be ahead of you.Me personally, my eyes are out in front of me 90% of the time. I'm fast so I'm probably going to hit something, not the other way around.
Oh yes. I become a chatty Kathy when I hear someone report on CTAF they are where I am. That freaks me out.
That was drilled into me hard during early training. "If you say you've over X, you better be over X... not 1 mile away approaching X"
BS. I can see opposing traffic from 20 miles if they're flashing their landing and taxi lights. It's common in my area. LED lights make it even more effective. Vis is excellent up to 15-20* from directly opposing.
"Less than 1 mile, same altitude" stresses me out
I got a call from ATC once about an F-18 passing from my 5 o'clock to 11 o'clock and to stop climbing.
Yeah, they have a few of those in Northwest Florida... :wink2:
And the one climbing or descending through your altitude.Don't be looking high and low. The only plane you care about is the one right at your altitude.
That REALLY helps with both the "see" and the "be seen".I run with the wingtip H.I.D.s on wig wag and I have LED nav lights and strobes.
I only stress out when ATC tells me to turn right left immediately.
I only stress out when ATC tells me to turn right left immediately.
I once had ATC warn me about traffic that had just popped up on their radar and was climbing rapidly towards me. I was IFR so ATC gave me a vector then almost immediately told me that the other aircraft ("unknown type") was not talking with them and was closing rapidly and told me to "do whatever you feel is necessary to maintain separation". I never saw the other aircraft. It was a citation who had just left an uncontrolled airport below and who then checked on about a minute later. That kind of sucked. ATC had to move someone else out of the way too. There was a layer of cumulus clouds maybe 50% coverage which he just blew through so couldn't see me.
I wish I could say that were true on my end. A few hundred hours in the G1000 and I still catch myself staring at the screens. Even the GTN650/750 combo get me. It's something about that moving map.
Saw a set off wheels appear above my windshield less than a hundred foot above us recently while flying to KTGI. Another aircraft overflew us from the rear. I don't think he ever saw us . Looked like a Diamond, probably looking at all his cool dash toys.
Gotta love VFR traffic when you're IMC...
According to the FAA this is how it usually happens. One aircraft higher, overtaking the other in a pattern. Difficult to see another aircraft thru the bottom of your aircraft! Radio communication is Sooooooo important.
So....what are you doing when you can't see that 11 o'clock and 1 mi traffic ATC just reported?The gist of several comments here is the pilot's increased intensity looking for traffic only after ATC calls out. I object to that. Do not be voice activated; instead, your eyes outside should always be to the same intensity.
Too, don't confine your search to the probable area which ATC calls out. Keep the same scan. This is to reconfirm what was taught since you were a student...or should had been taught. I have been guilty of the same. ATC calls traffic at, say 2 o'clock to naturally I focus my attention to that sector. Whoa! he passed me at 10 o'clock.
So....what are you doing when you can't see that 11 o'clock and 1 mi traffic ATC just reported?
you seem to indicate not to quit the "scan" for traffic....even though ATC just called traffic 11 o'clock and a mile.I don't understand your question. Maybe it was the sun in my eyes, a bug splatter, the windscreen post, etc that obstructed my vision. Is that what you mean?
you seem to indicate not to quit the "scan" for traffic....even though ATC just called traffic 11 o'clock and a mile.
What is the correct response? Do you keep looking all over the sky?....or do you try and do a better job with a vertical scan at 11 o'clock?....or do you change your position to put the traffic into not a factor?