Hardly.I'm good. Seems I'm the only one crazy enough to fly over Lake Michigan in a single. There's no traffic to call out!
For additional situational awareness, I sometimes monitor the various approach frequencies along my route of flight, without being on flight following. Occasionally, I will hear the controller advise another pilot of VFR traffic, and that traffic is me.
A question for the controllers: at this point, what is the best course of action?
I hear you guys, but if I just pipe up on the radio the controller has no idea which target is talking. My most treasured "training" experience has been about six hours total plugged in with TRACON and ARTCC controllers, watching the action and asking numerous questions. The AIM obviously has to discourage random idents, but in this special case I think an ident is sensible. And, having seen idents from the controllers' side I don't think its disruptive.Okay, but let the controller ask for the ident if he wants one. If you want to pipe up and let the controller know who you are and you think you were the traffic called out, that's fine and probably welcome, but I wouldn't hit ident without being asked to do so.
...I'm not sure who all is controllers here...
I'm not sure who all is controllers here, but I'd be interested in controllers' opinions on this. Disruptive, don't-care, or helpful?
Agreed. The rare occasions when I only monitor are typically hops between two Class D airports that are close together (40nm or less), one or both of which are under a Bravo shelf. Otherwise my policy is to either file or to get FF.Retired ATC and participation would be more helpful. Then we would have your type, verified altitude etc.
I used to enjoy providing the service. Especially before all this GPS crap took the fun out of ATC. Nothing like getting a pilot that doesn't have a clue where they're at and one vector gets them to their destination.
So will ADS-B take the fun out of FF as well in a few years?
For additional situational awareness, I sometimes monitor the various approach frequencies along my route of flight, without being on flight following. Occasionally, I will hear the controller advise another pilot of VFR traffic, and that traffic is me.
A question for the controllers: at this point, what is the best course of action?
If there is no interaction, there is no need for etiquette.
Well, I do think he IS the only one crazy enough to fly over Lake Michigan in a single at 50 AGL.Hardly.
On the way back from SF the other day, at about 5,500 msl, an aerobatic jet came out of nowhere across our path about 5 miles ahead of us. He passed to our right, pulled straight up, looped over and dove back down, passing directly under us by about 1,000 ft. Not a blip on ADSB, and not a word from ATC, and we were on FF.
NOTE: If the wife is in the plane, I get FF...every time. It's the first thing she asks after we take off.
FF ain't that easy to get 'round here. The time of day has a bearing on that. 0:dark thirty AM no problem. But after about 9:00am local, untill about 7 or 8 pm local fergit it. Aint gonna happen.If you're going to bother to listen, why not just get flight following too?
Only times I don't bother when I'm VFR, is when I'm very low level and I know they can't pick me up, not really much traffic in remote areas at 1k AGL and below, unless you got floats you got zero outs, water or trees, not many traffic conflicts, that said I don't bother listening to approach.
How do you know it's you?
And TFRs.I seem to recall hearing controllers looking people busting R-areas with both guard and the local ATC frequency.
NoA hopefully clarifying example: I'm flying along on an airway at a VFR altitude appropriate for my direction of flight. I hear a jump plane on frequency. ATC points me out to the jump plane. I spot the jump plane, he's opposite direction, level, below me. Would it be helpful for me to say "n12345 has the traffic in sight, no factor"?
FF ain't that easy to get 'round here. The time of day has a bearing on that. 0:dark thirty AM no problem. But after about 9:00am local, untill about 7 or 8 pm local fergit it. Aint gonna happen.
Hey wait a minute now...from July to September, I'm occasionally over that lake too! But then, I DO get FF when over the lake, so you're good!I'm good. Seems I'm the only one crazy enough to fly over Lake Michigan in a single. There's no traffic to call out!
It's easy enough to map from mode S code to aircraft type... I just sent ForeFlight an email requesting this.Only thing you'll really need for FF in the future, is what type aircraft that we're seeing on the display.
What is our record?!
According to the AIM, it's wrong.I am a believer in FF but for various reasons I have occasionally done what the OP is doing and once or twice have heard myself called as traffic. (Sometimes it is obvious, but hardly always.)
What I have done is to hit ident, then say something like "Approach, Bugsmasher N12345, I think we're your traffic and just hit Ident." Usually, the answer is simply "Thank you, say intentions." and I tell the nice man where we're going and if we plan an altitude change in the near future. Right, wrong, or indifferent I don't know but it seems to be a reasonable way to handle the situation.
So, assuming I'm being a good VFR pilot, on an airway, at an appropriate altitude, am I reducing controller workload by not being on FF, or am I increasing controller workload by being an unidentified flib that you can't talk to?
Hmm, some guy on this thread mentioned something about that. Oh wait, here it is...I,fairly sure that traffic count has an effect on controller pay...you are not doing them any favors by not using flight following.
Bob Gardner
Don't fret, I've done this on a necropost too. At least you didn't contradict yourself.I'm always amazed by the number of pilots who pass up estabished practices in order to "reduce controller workload." Subject to correction by roncachamp, my understanding is that controller pay grade is based in part on traffic count, so by not participating in FF you are taking dollars out of the controller's pocket. Controllers get paid to handle traffic; you are traffic.
Bob Gardner
Can you confirm the premise?Hmm, some guy on this said mentioned something about that. Oh wait, here it is...
Don't fret, I've done this on a necropost too. At least you didn't contradict yourself.