PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
If you are unsure, ask.
I was doing a 172 checkout for a retired 20 gazillion hour airline pilot at an airport with two parallel runways and a crosswind runway. We were cleared to land on runway 35 with a very strong crosswind.the pilot turned to me and said, "it's been a long time since I landed a 172 in a crosswind. You might have to help." I replied, "or you can just ask for the other runway." He looked at me a bit shocked. After decades of following ATC instructions, it simply did not dawn on him to do that.On one of my first flights alone after my checkride, I was asked to do that. I started to do it, but then wasn't quite sure if I was doing it correctly and started to get stressed. Being low and slow, and being PIC, I made the decision to go around. Told the tower what I was going to do and they simply just advised me to do the go around north of the runway paralleling the landing Cessna. NBD. We're PIC... we are in charge of our own safety. Apparently, there was a student pilot behind me and when I was tying down my plane, he came zipping up to me completely beside himself that I told tower I wanted to go around instead of doing S-Turns. Had no idea we could take charge of a situation like that. I'd argue that HE was the one with a bad CFI. While my CFI may not have taught me how to do the best s-turns on final in the world, he certainly taught me how to be safe in the pattern. We can't expect our instructors to teach us to master everything. So, I disagree with the NTSB on that one.
If you are unsure, ask.
If you're letting down from TPA anywhere you can't glide to the runway, you're setting yourself up for an off-field landing. Or worse.
Stay at TPA until the runway is assured. If nothing else to give yourself a whopping fifteen seconds to troubleshoot and decide where to go if the powerplant decides it's taking a vacation today.
Many "airliner sized traffic patterns" are already setting you up for this at some airports. Why add to the insanity?
I've been turned base by a controller so far out, I might as well have flown the full ILS procedure from the outer marker. No reason to let down at all VMC. Fly back closer to the airport and then start a descent.
The turn is never the trigger for the descent. The distance from the runway is.
This. Getting the "I'll call your base" at SNA is very common due to the bigger guys on the parallel, or other common sequencing asks. The TPA at SNA for us little guys is only 800' AGL...above fairly dense cityscape. If I get outside of gliding distance on an extended downwind at SNA, I start climbing (almost everyone does; the flight schools here train their students this way as well). When I choose to descend is dictated by my distance from the runway.
I don't want to be this guy that landed short of SNA but cheated further injury through a mix of good execution and luck.
Works sometimes until the plane following you doesn't slow.
It helps to have some SA on who else may be in the pattern and the reason for needing to extend your downwind. If it is because there are a lot of planes doing closed traffic, then yes, slowing down can complicate things. But if the reason they are extending you is to let a jet in on the instrument approach, it makes sense to slow down so that you don't get too far out.Yeah, I wouldn't slow because of that reason. Just stick to your normal pattern and normal pattern speed/alt. That's what ATC is basing their calls on.
But they're also basing their calls on you maintaining that speed on final...I've seen several times where the reason for continued "I'll call your base" calls was because somebody flew downwind at 100 knots and slowed to their normal 60-70 when they turned the 5-mile final.Yeah, I wouldn't slow because of that reason. Just stick to your normal pattern and normal pattern speed/alt. That's what ATC is basing their calls on.
I would be willing to bet that if a pilot made a short approach after being cleared to land on the downwind, there would be "a number to call" when the plane is parked.
The question WAS, what do the tower controllers mean when they say "I'll call your base"Last instruction was "Cleared to land"? Comply if safe. What's the question?.
The question WAS, what do the tower controllers mean when they say "I'll call your base"
Do they mean you are to turn to base leg when they call "N----- cleared to land"?
A clearance to land means that appropriate separation on the landing runway will be ensured. A landing clearance does not relieve the pilot from compliance with any previously issued restriction.
Short approaches conducted without ATC approval may result in an arrival and a departure being too close at low altitude, resulting in a near midair collision or worse. I've seen it before. Your best bet is to get approval for short approaches.There have been several incidents in the vicinity of controlled airports that were caused primarily by aircraft executing unexpected maneuvers. ATC service is based upon observed or known traffic and airport conditions. Controllers establish the sequence of arriving and departing aircraft by requiring them to adjust flight as necessary to achieve proper spacing. These adjustments can only be based on observed traffic, accurate pilot reports, and anticipated aircraft maneuvers. Pilots are expected to cooperate so as to preclude disrupting traffic flows or creating conflicting patterns.
One pilot's short approach is another pilot's normal pattern. If the tower has certain expectations beyond "don't cut off the guy ahead of you", that needs to be communicated.
What part of the thread didn't you read?So where in all of this did "I'll call your base" come in?
The question WAS, what do the tower controllers mean when they say "I'll call your base"
Do they mean you are to turn to base leg when they call "N----- cleared to land"?
That day I was directed to enter the pattern direct into the left down wind to 34 left when I was at Shilshow Marina ( that's a well known reporting point) after Seattle approach turns you over to tower. After I was abreast the tower, (that's about mid field) they say "N---- cleared to land"
Normally we light weights go to 34 Right but it was closed that day. we never get that call over the east side right pattern to 34R they will clear you to land when you are at mid field, then you do the normal landing to the little runway.
about 5 minutes after I exited the runway and cleared to east parking the AN-22? monster landed. I always assumed the tower just wanted me down and out of the way prior to the huge thing closed the airport until the air to settle down again.
But getting back, is there a clear meaning for the statement? "I'll call your base"? where would it be found?
If they want you down and out ASAP then they'll tell you "make short approach."
Pretty much this except in my case, they'll extend me either to the north or south shore, forget about me, then tell me to indent when I ask them when I can turn.They are planning on forgetting you , hoping you will smack into the mountains and no longer have to deal with you. (KELP, 20 years ago, downwind rwy 8R)
There wasn't anyone else in the pattern.If they want you down and out ASAP then they'll tell you "make short approach." If they told you "I'll call your base" then they are trying to sequence you into a specific spot in the pattern.
Would it be on final 5 minutes behind my landing from the other direction? Maybe? they would have been south of SEA, I never saw it until it landed.Except the AN-224 on final.
Wow. . .you'd get away with a lot less than a couple hundred feet! Maybe 30-40 feet. . .couldn't use the airplane again, of course.I always loved that he caught the green light in that video. LOL.
We have to be careful about climbing much when they extend us out in the ridiculous conga line started by someone who makes monster patterns, since the Bravo shelf is overhead. Pattern 6885, bravo 8000 and above.
You just kinda start looking for open fields. There used to be a lot more of them.
The usual place people survive south of the airport is the strip of land around the toll road or the golf course.
North of the airport it's the other golf course kinda. It's small. You're gonna get hurt but you'll probably survive it. Or the reservoir is another northerly sucky option.
East it used to be the open undeveloped land but they're filling all of that in.
West, there isn't **** to land on other than the roof of the IKEA. LOL. Probably not recommended.
We're being surrounded by "civilization" which will kill some pilots eventually. The last fatal was in someone's front yard northwest of the field.
We've had a couple make the impossible turn but not come all the way around back to the runway, but just enough to get back into the airport fence and grass.
I'm pretty happy I have the STOL kit on the 182. If I land it at 35-40 and have a couple hundred feet to slow up from that, maybe it won't hurt as much.
West, there isn't **** to land on other than the roof of the IKEA. LOL. Probably not recommended.
The AIM defines a turn from base to final as one occurring no closer than 1/4 mile from the runway. Any turns closer than that are considered short approaches and must have ATC approval.
AIM 4-3-5:
Short approaches conducted without ATC approval may result in an arrival and a departure being too close at low altitude, resulting in a near midair collision or worse. I've seen it before. Your best bet is to get approval for short approaches.
Would it be on final 5 minutes behind my landing from the other direction? Maybe? they would have been south of SEA, I never saw it until it landed.
Sure, the 1/4 mile reference is in all of the diagrams of the patterns. Figures 4-3-2 and 4-3-3.Can you quote to where the AIM talks about 1/4 mile, short approach,etc.?
They are planning on forgetting you , hoping you will smack into the mountains and no longer have to deal with you. (KELP, 20 years ago, downwind rwy 8R)