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Bob Noel
Other than the cost of running back and forth and back and forth, what is the approximate cost of said procedure?
And what is the value?
Other than the cost of running back and forth and back and forth, what is the approximate cost of said procedure?
And what is the value?
It is not an arduous process. You are asking to pilot a flying missile 10 miles from the major national security sites of the United States. The least you can do is endure a straightforward, four-hour process to get vetted and trained on how to participate in a system designed to keep our nation safer. If you find it that irritating, think about the many soldiers/Marines/etc. who are on their fourth, fifth, sixth+ deployments overseas, fighting to keep you safe. This selfish, right-wing self-entitled nonsense totally confounds me.
And don't tell me the system is broken, or the FRZ is stupid, or that you have some brilliant plan to manage the nation's airspace in a way that our many experienced professionals are too stupid to grasp and is only accessible to your genius. You have no idea what you are talking about. There are people who are educated and experienced in national security and do this for a living. They are doing the best they can, better than you could. Yes, TSA screening is inconvenient. Yes, the FRZ process takes up one of your precious mornings.
There are kids in Walter Reed missing all their limbs. F*cking deal with it.
Ron,
Can you give a link to an online resource which tells how to go about this process?
Carol
About the same time the rules make sense and aren't simply security theater?Dagnabit! What will it take to get people to play by the rules?
I haven't been safer because of our foreign military adventures for decades. On the contrary, they are bankrupting and generating bad will towards all Americans.fighting to keep you safe.
Does filing IFR get you out of the hassle? Tom's ridiculous non sequitur above aside, that process as described in the OP sounds absolutely... well... par for the government course. Sounds not even possible without actually visiting DC which is actually laughable if true.
I'm not really planning on flying to DC anytime soon so I'm more curious than I am willing to wade through the AOPA docs. Quick answer here would be sufficient.
Realize that this thread is39 years old! But, AFAIK, not much has changed in that time.
It does as far as the SFRA is concerned, but not the FRZ. So, by filing and operating IFR, you can fly to any of the airports inside the SFRA other than those in the FRZ without further ado. To get into the airports inside the FRZ (the only three GA airports there being Hyde, Potomac, and College Park), you have to go through the FRZ approval process (including the fingerprinting and background check) during which you'll learn the procedure for filing and flying into the FRZ. And note that merely filing IFR isn't sufficient for SFRA operations -- for IFR in the SFRA, you must have your clearance and be squawking your assigned code before entering the SFRA, including getting them before takeoff for departure from inside the SFRA.Does filing IFR get you out of the hassle?
For the FRZ, that's pretty much true, but you can still fly to Freeway or Gaithersburg or Manassas or Dulles in order to go through the FRZ clearance process by following the DC SFRA procedures without any prior vetting. I'll forego comment on the laughability of any of this and just stick with explaining the rules as they are.Tom's ridiculous non sequitur above aside, that process as described in the OP sounds absolutely... well... par for the government course. Sounds not even possible without actually visiting DC which is actually laughable if true.
But that is not enough for the FRZ.Quick answer is no.
IFR gets you out of the minor hassles with the SFRA.
That is true for the FRZ, but not for the SFRA outside the FRZ. Note that the "code" to which Marauder refers is a personal security code to identify you with you file your FRZ flight plan, not a transponder code you can use any time you like to enter the FRZ)You need a security check and a code issued to you.
I'll forego comment on the laughability of any of this and just stick with explaining the rules as they are.
But that is not enough for the FRZ.
Since the discussion is about the FRZ, what you said was only part of the answer. I would not want anyone to think for a instant that just being on an IFR flight plan covers you for the FRZ the way it does for the DC SFRA. We get too many violations around here to let that detail slide.Thats what I said, right ?
Since the discussion is about the FRZ, what you said was only part of the answer. I would not want anyone to think for a instant that just being on an IFR flight plan covers you for the FRZ the way it does for the DC SFRA. We get too many violations around here to let that detail slide.
I haven't been safer because of our foreign military adventures for decades. On the contrary, they are bankrupting and generating bad will towards all Americans.
And I don't support the troops. By now everybody knows these foreign wars are completely pointless and our volunteer military is just paid mercenaries or adventurers. Deal with it.
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Is this VFR only or does all IFR traffic have to do it also?
I did the paperwork about five years ago in half a day as well. College Park is a great little airport to fly into, just watch out for deer when arriving at night and remember it's a pretty short 2600' runway. I went in there many times from Georgia in a Cherokee, and a few times in a Twin Comanche. Of course it's easier to fly in there if instrument rated and filing an IFR plan.
Fwiw, the procedure for getting vetted has simplified a bit, with no visit to a FSDO required and fingerprinting done all over the country. Check the vetting procedures on the website of your MD3 airport of choice.
And honestly, VFR is easier than IFR if you took the SFRA/FRZ course and follow the procedures.
I took the course and followed the procedures. I just found that VFR I got vectored all over the place, often with completely new headings when passed to a new controller. I found arriving in CGS to be easier IFR, and departing to be easier VFR. But I've only been in there 15-20 times so in no way consider myself an authority, just a pilot who has an opinion.
the procedure for getting vetted has simplified a bit, with no visit to a FSDO required and fingerprinting done all over the country. Check the vetting procedures on the website of your MD3 airport of choice.
I've been watching this; Hyde seems to indicate on their site that they will do it all remotely, but CGS (which would be my preferred field) still says you have to visit their office in person for the final step. I've meant to call them during the week but didn't get the chance. Anyone have better intel?
I've been watching this; Hyde seems to indicate on their site that they will do it all remotely, but CGS (which would be my preferred field) still says you have to visit their office in person for the final step. I've meant to call them during the week but didn't get the chance. Anyone have better intel?
If you're under the bravo, you're not going to get vectored. In fact, the special controllers working SFRA/FRZ VFR traffic only outside of bravo can't vector you because you're "transponder observed" rather than "radar contact". If you do get a bravo clearance, you will be vectored around traffic, but if you're IFR you have to be separated from other IFR as well, so you'll get detoured regardless.
Wow. Brad, I'm not sure what your beef is, with three posts now doubting the experience I've had, my having completed the training, or having competence to follow directions. I am not an expert at these things, only a commercially rated pilot that as I've said has flown into CGS a couple dozen times. I also have a friend who works in Potomac TRACON who I've discussed these matters with. I would consider being given a heading to be the same as being vectored. I've ALWAYS been kept bumping along below the Bravo when arriving VFR, and have ALWAYS received headings until reaching Freeway, then cleared direct College Park. I'm not going to argue what the "special controllers" can and cannot do, I'm just stating what I've experienced. You don't have to believe it, or even be respectful to a fellow pilot. I only posted here because I thought that my experience might be helpful for someone. I don't have an agenda on this topic, and I'm sorry if my experience conflicts with what you have experienced or what you wish to have portrayed. This was entirely unintentional. Tailwinds!
No beef--I'm point out, for the benefit of others reading this thread (it's a sticky!) that there is really no reason to avoid entering the FRZ VFR because they believe they'll get vectored around. For VFR operations inside the FRZ, you're generally required to enter and exit the most direct route. The controller was giving you an instruction, in accordance with 14 CFR 93.343(e)(1), to proceed to CGS via the vicinity of Freeway Airport. That's not an vector, but adherence to a procedure that is regulatorily defined (although use of the word "may" in the reg indicates that it should be expected, but not necessarily what is given by the controller).
My point about the SFRA controllers is that they are there solely for the purpose of fulfilling the USSS mandated security protocols in the national capital region. They are only working VFR traffic outside of class bravo. They don't vector traffic, but they may point out traffic, and issue advisories.
For reference, I'm based at Potomac Airfield, and have flown out of all three MD3 airports for the past 10 years, but for personal flight and a couple thousand hours as an airborne traffic pilot and CFI.
I will agree that if you're approaching CGS from the northwest, hoping to fly the ground track of the RNAV 14 into CGS VFR, it is annoying being told to head over to W00 to approach the airport.
I have the same issue coming into VKX from the northeast. Sometimes the controllers will permit me to cut through the ADW surface area to approach VKX straight in for runway 24. My chances of getting that short cut are about the same whether I'm IFR or VFR.
My final point- controllers would much rather deal with an FRZ inbound/outbound aircraft VFR rather than IFR. Don't be concerned about canceling IFR once you're talking with Potomac Tracon...it makes their life a lot easier and will likely make your trip shorter.
A heading is "N...., fly heading xxx." I've never once had a controller tell me to make my way on my own to Freeway. I've ALWAYS received specific magnetic headings to fly. I've been arriving from the west or southwest. CGS is on the northern side of the FRZ. I've been given headings by one controller taking me north around the western side, only to have the next controller turn me south and around the eastern side. Always by specific instructions to fly a magnetic heading. Now, if those were only suggestions by controllers not authorized to be giving them, the SFRA/FRZ training needs some serious revising. I'm not going to be the pilot that challenges them.
Pardon me if this is covered elsewhere in this thread, but what are my requirements to go IFR. I know I still have to do the fingerprinting and background checks. Other than that, do you know of any other requirements I must meet?Ron,
Can you give a link to an online resource which tells how to go about this process?
Carol