Good overview of what control towers provide and what they don’t provide. Just like in Gryder’s incorrect assumption of the tower’s responsibility for separation at APA, a lot of pilots assume separation is being provided if they have radar.
Should be stressed though that this is a basic overview and he’s referring to Class Ds (VFR) only. If it’s a facility (B,C) where the local controller is also qual’d on approach, or they’ve completed a basic radar course on the use of the DBRITE, they can perform the same functions as TRACON. Primary function though is to scan their runways and control their VFR traffic pattern.
Eggcellent!!! this needs to be drilled into every CFI. There is way too much "perceived" comfort level with a towered airfield. The mid-air at my home field proves it.
I have a friend who survived a mid-air.....while being worked by ATC doing practice approaches in the Warrenton area. Both aircraft (PA-28 and Bonanza) had very senior experienced pilots each with thousands of hours (senior FAA accident investigator in the PA-28 and chief medical AME from the NTSB with lead CFI in the Bo).....the Bo flew under the PA-28 and got its tail cut off.
Was with a friend departing class D. Was number two behind a Cherokee ... when we were given our take-off clearance. Controllers are people too, which gives all the more reason to be looking out the window ...
They only problem would have been passing the Cherokee in the grass to get to the runway ...
Ahyep. Tower at one airport cleared me to land on 32. As I was on short final, they cleared a flight school plane to take off on 14. Ah, tower, did you cancel my landing clearance?
I seen to recall that a KC-135 is a derivative of the 707, not the 737.We had a KC-135 (Boeing 737) miss the turn onto a taxiway. Ground people spent 30 minutes removing barriers so he could make the 180 turn to go back to the taxiway.
I can match every bonehead controller story to a bonehead pilot story.
Paul's videos are great, and this one is a good reminder.
This accident case study from ASI is another important lesson:
I know many would get on the Cirrus pilot for violating basic aircraft control principles, but if I got twisted and turned that many times by ATC I'd probably get pretty task saturated as well.
The KC-135 is not a 707.
Correct. If anything, the 707 is a derivative of the KC-135/Boeing 717. (Yes, there was a B-717 before the MD-80 variant after MD was sold to Boeing. The KC-135/Boeing 717 had a fuselage that was oval in cross section, the 707 fuse cross section was round.)
So could you integrate a KC-135 and get a 367-80, or am I getting my math terms mixed up?Actually it is a derivative of the 367-80
^^^ this.Actually it is a derivative of the 367-80
I can match every bonehead controller story to a bonehead pilot story.
We had a KC-135 (Boeing 707) miss the turn onto a taxiway. Ground people spent 30 minutes removing barriers so he could make the 180 turn to go back to the taxiway.
I can match every bonehead controller story to a bonehead pilot story.
I could match two boneheaded pilot stories for every one boneheaded controller story.
This thread reminds me of a piece from my Dad's August, 1948 Air Trails magazine. Posting here for your reading pleasure...
Paul's videos are great, and this one is a good reminder.
This accident case study from ASI is another important lesson:
I know many would get on the Cirrus pilot for violating basic aircraft control principles, but if I got twisted and turned that many times by ATC I'd probably get pretty task saturated as well.[/QUOTE
I found this video hard to watch, and had to go back to it a couple of times to see it all.
This thread reminds me of a piece from my Dad's August, 1948 Air Trails magazine.
It would be an nteresting problem today, parking between two rows of P-51s.
Just curious, what is a blue Zipper?
They only problem would have been passing the Cherokee in the grass to get to the runway ...
The pilot initiated the sequence of events when deciding to fly illegally with an expired flight review, attempting a flight beyond their own skill level, and getting lost on the first lap around the traffic pattern.