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Velocity173
This is out of the controllers manual. The controller is expecting you to turn based on 400 ft above the DER and off the DER.
Now, worth getting “jumped on”? No. Unless you were climbing like a slug, an early turn wouldn’t even be noticeable on radar.
View attachment 87066
You are correct. I think that's a bit of semantics. A diverse departure is definitely an "obstacle departure procedure." But it is not an "Obstacle Departure Procedure."??? AIM 5-2-9 d.
d. ....When an instrument approach is initially developed for an airport, the need for DPs is assessed. The procedure designer conducts an obstacle analysis to support departure operations. If an aircraft may turn in any direction from a runway within the limits of the assessment area (see paragraph 5−2−9e3) and remain clear of obstacles, that runway passes what is called a diverse departure assessment and no ODP will be published....
The "and off the DER" part is not supported by the quoted passage.
Well the ICA starts at the DER. So at the DER. My point being, not before.
Don't confuse my occupational disability to read things in more than one way with what I actually thinkBeing 400 feet above the end of the runway elevation at midfield does meet both elevation requirements. Being at 400 feet in and of itself meets the 35 foot thing. But ‘midfield’ doesn’t meet what the whole thing starts out with
1. Unless specified otherwise, required obstacle
clearance for all departures, including diverse, is
based on the pilot crossing the departure end of the
runway at least 35 feet above the departure end of
runway elevation, climbing to 400 feet above the
departure end of runway elevation before making the
initial turn....
You can’t cross the DER if you never get there because you turned at midfield
Don't confuse my occupational disability to read things in more than one way with what I actually think Keep in mind that ATL's tower is just about 400' tall. Turning at midfield could be nasty.
The ICA only exists below 400 feet.
When I have received a takeoff clearance with the words full length, it was clearance to use the displaced threshold to begin my ground roll, not in reference to the departure end of the runway.
I’m talking about the assessment for obstacles. The ICA starts at the DER at a 40:1 slope and generally goes out to 2 nm. As long as the pilot climbs at 200 ft starting at the DER, they can turn on course at 400 AGL. If the aircraft is before the DER and below 400 ft, there’s no guarantee obstacle clearance for an early turn.
If the aircraft is before the DER and below 400 ft, there’s no guarantee obstacle clearance for an early turn.
I think you are right, it was a very long runway. I think I was at ECP. There was someone doing pattern work, maybe a Pilatus? Seemed odd.My guess is they have been burned by early turns more than once. What airport? Parallel or intersecting Runways???
First off, 4-3-3- doesn't say anything close to what you're saying. If you were to take that as gospel, then you wouldn't turn below the TPA. Tell me how compliance with a traffic pattern is required for VFR aircraft unless the tower tells you. Tell me how it applies to IFR aircraft at all.Define ‘obligation.’ The AIM certainly implies you shouldn’t be indiscriminately turning before the end of the Runway. 4-3-3 FIG 4-3-2 and FIG 4-3-3, example 4 of both, pages 4-3-4 and 4-3-5
First off, 4-3-3- doesn't say anything close to what you're saying. If you were to take that as gospel, then you wouldn't turn below the TPA. Tell me how compliance with a traffic pattern is required for VFR aircraft unless the tower tells you. Tell me how it applies to IFR aircraft at all.
None I know of. Given the number of times I have been instructed to make an early turn, if there was such a reg and if it were not accompanied by "except as authorized by ATC", there would be a heck of a lot of violations for Premier1's "friend" to call in.So exactly what regulation would one be in violation of if it is VMC, part 91 operation and one commences a turn before the end of the runway and visually avoids obstacles?
I know what you're talking about.
You stated:
"The controller is expecting you to turn based on [both] 400 ft above the DER and off the DER" then cited a passage to support your statement, but the passage does not support your statement, nor do the references cited by the passage support the statement.
So I haven't seen any evidence that you must be both 400 feet and at or beyond the departure end of the runway before turning.
The ICA is irrelevant if you are above 400 feet. The purpose of the ICA is to allow you to climb to 400 feet.
We're not talking about being below 400 feet, we're talking about being above 400 feet.
So exactly what regulation would one be in violation of if it is VMC, part 91 operation and one commences a turn before the end of the runway and visually avoids obstacles?
If you're a grossed-out crop duster on the way to a bean field it's probably ok. But climbing like a rocket up through the bottom of the pattern seems like it would be covered under "careless and reckless".So exactly what regulation would one be in violation of if it is VMC, part 91 operation and one commences a turn before the end of the runway and visually avoids obstacles?
The problem is there is NO SUCH expectation. The pilot's expectation is that if the pilot makes the turn after the end of the runway and at least 400 feet, he won't hit anything. The controller's expectation is that the pilot might not execute the turn before then, and that if he was given an "immediate" turn in the clearance, that the expectation is he do so before 2 miles.f. The problem is that the expectation is that the turn will not start until the end of the runway and 400'.
??? AIM 5-2-9 d.
d. ....When an instrument approach is initially developed for an airport, the need for DPs is assessed. The procedure designer conducts an obstacle analysis to support departure operations. If an aircraft may turn in any direction from a runway within the limits of the assessment area (see paragraph 5−2−9e3) and remain clear of obstacles, that runway passes what is called a diverse departure assessment and no ODP will be published....
They mean a published abbreviated or full-route ODP. Nonetheless, the assessment required for departures from an IFR airport from a TERPs standpoint is what determines diverse, abbreviated, or full route. In the case of a diverse departure, you must climb to 400 feet before turning on course. Isn't that a procedure???? AIM 5-2-9 d.
Thanks for all the replies, definitely good things to think about. I am pretty convinced I didn't break any regulation but 48 hours or so of pondering makes me realize I probably could have waited a bit longer to turn. There was some traffic pattern aircraft, although no immediate danger/conflict. For those wondering, here was the exact verbiage used by controller/pilot through the situation:
(pre-taxi)
Controller: N1234 cleared to XYZ airport via, on-departure turn heading 335 vectors to ABC departure... (rest of clearance)
Pilot: Reads back
(at hold short line)
Controller: N1234 turn left heading 335, runway 3 cleared for takeoff (I read this back)
I commence my takeoff roll, probably airborne about 800 feet down the runway, climb to about 200 feet and turn left heading 335 as I am about 6,000 feet down the 8,200-foot runway.
Controller: N1234 FLY RUNWAY HEADING, you are not supposed to make your turn yet. Please wait until past departure end of runway or about one-half mile past (I found this 2nd part to be a confusing control instruction, containing two options)
Pilot: Sorry, thought I was cleared heading 335 per clearance (Turning back to Runway Heading now). I didn't understand your last control instruction, I will wait until you call my turn
Controller: N1234 I will call your turn.
And the rest was uneventful. I filed a nasa report of course. Hope nothing else comes of it!
Nice come-back on your part. At many airports ATIS directs to maintain runway heading 'till the MM (used to, when there were MMs), about 1/2 mile beyond the end.Controller: N1234 FLY RUNWAY HEADING, you are not supposed to make your turn yet. Please wait until past departure end of runway or about one-half mile past (I found this 2nd part to be a confusing control instruction, containing two options)
Pilot: Sorry, thought I was cleared heading 335 per clearance (Turning back to Runway Heading now). I didn't understand your last control instruction, I will wait until you call my turn
The controller told you to turn left heading 335, then told you you should have waited for him to call the turn? It can't be both, it's one or the other.
It does sound like you turned earlier than the controller expected and he probably didn't plan for that. But that doesn't make it incorrect.
No later than 2 miles when instructed to make an "immediate turn", agreed? Not for normal turns.Again, nothing there indicates anything about when the pilot turns other than it will be expected no LATER than 2 miles.
Just curious, what airport were you departing from?
Yep, but I was given an immediate right turn to 250 heading. I had a business jet behind me so I think they wanted me out of his way.
Yep, but I was given an immediate right turn to 250 heading. I had a business jet behind me so I think they wanted me out of his way.
They've been told for years not to use "immediate" for a departure turn. I wouldn't argue with them, I would turn at 400 feet. Let ATC make a federal case out of it.I just flew out of KC downtown this weekend, was departing 19 but destination was north, clearance was make an immediate right turn to 250 heading. I can't say for sure how high I was when I began my turn but I always wait until 300' before getting my flaps up and I never turn before that. First time I've had that in clearance, cloud bases were about 3500' so obstacle avoidance wasn't an issue.