Captain Larry
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Messages
- 49
- Display Name
Display name:
Larry Nelson
I have turned into a cautious pilot from my younger years. I have been flying since 1967. This week I had the need to fly half way across a Midwest state on business. My departure field was near a large city with a large airport, and next to it a major Air Force base. My destination was, actually, in the middle of that state but with two towered airports near my route and a third just beyond my proposed destination, non towered, but all three with commercial activity. There, I have set the table for my rant.
The WX turned a bit sour with icing forecast from the surface to 10,000', pretty much where I live. I went online for pilot reports and there were, maybe, TWO between Des Moines and Denver, all in the flight levels, and, on edit, nowhere near my route. Oh, and this was at 10:45am (not 4am).
So, lacking any sort of details on flight conditions ONLINE, I called Flight Service. They had only those same pilot reports. I will digress from my rant to THANK those two pilots who took the time to get INFORMATION INTO THE SYSTEM to benefit their fellow aviators.
My Twin Comanche does not have boots, or prop/windshield deicing equipment, so information such as TOPS, LAYERS, and icing conditions are GOLD to me and everyone like me who flies, mostly from 12,000' on down.
I knew that I could make my meeting if I got in a (rental) car and drove like a mad man. I also knew that, no doubt, I would be reaching for my sun glasses when I reached my destination in the car. I also knew that, asleep on a recliner at the destination airport, was a freight dog whose Be99 was parked and awaiting it's daily load, with vital information in his head that could have been shared. I also knew that several regionals had made approaches into the three airports mentioned earlier prior to me climbing in a car. I also knew that, most likely, the tower guys asked at one time or another, "hey, can you give me a bases/tops report". I also knew that several "equipped" aircraft were/ or had already, made approaches.
I am as guilty as anyone else, but in this age of information, can we not do a better job of helping out others who my be making decisions based on only 50% of the available information, much of which is speculative, while we hold the information that is REAL?
On edit, 7 hours of car driving there and back.......
Several years ago, lacking any pireps for a winter flight in active WX, I was about to give up, but decided to call the tower on the phone. "hey, any tops or layers reports", I ask. "Stand by", the nice ATC guy sez.....(in the background...."Delta XYZ can you give me a tops report on your climb?)...tower guys comes back "bases at 700' tops at 4,200', negative ice....wow, thanks, just what I need to launch for my trip. However, when I landed THAT very information was not "in the system, because I checked. Sad.....I know the tower guys get busy too, but even 30 minute old information helps....just sayin'
PILOT REPORTS ARE ENCOURAGED....let's do better.
Larry
The WX turned a bit sour with icing forecast from the surface to 10,000', pretty much where I live. I went online for pilot reports and there were, maybe, TWO between Des Moines and Denver, all in the flight levels, and, on edit, nowhere near my route. Oh, and this was at 10:45am (not 4am).
So, lacking any sort of details on flight conditions ONLINE, I called Flight Service. They had only those same pilot reports. I will digress from my rant to THANK those two pilots who took the time to get INFORMATION INTO THE SYSTEM to benefit their fellow aviators.
My Twin Comanche does not have boots, or prop/windshield deicing equipment, so information such as TOPS, LAYERS, and icing conditions are GOLD to me and everyone like me who flies, mostly from 12,000' on down.
I knew that I could make my meeting if I got in a (rental) car and drove like a mad man. I also knew that, no doubt, I would be reaching for my sun glasses when I reached my destination in the car. I also knew that, asleep on a recliner at the destination airport, was a freight dog whose Be99 was parked and awaiting it's daily load, with vital information in his head that could have been shared. I also knew that several regionals had made approaches into the three airports mentioned earlier prior to me climbing in a car. I also knew that, most likely, the tower guys asked at one time or another, "hey, can you give me a bases/tops report". I also knew that several "equipped" aircraft were/ or had already, made approaches.
I am as guilty as anyone else, but in this age of information, can we not do a better job of helping out others who my be making decisions based on only 50% of the available information, much of which is speculative, while we hold the information that is REAL?
On edit, 7 hours of car driving there and back.......
Several years ago, lacking any pireps for a winter flight in active WX, I was about to give up, but decided to call the tower on the phone. "hey, any tops or layers reports", I ask. "Stand by", the nice ATC guy sez.....(in the background...."Delta XYZ can you give me a tops report on your climb?)...tower guys comes back "bases at 700' tops at 4,200', negative ice....wow, thanks, just what I need to launch for my trip. However, when I landed THAT very information was not "in the system, because I checked. Sad.....I know the tower guys get busy too, but even 30 minute old information helps....just sayin'
PILOT REPORTS ARE ENCOURAGED....let's do better.
Larry