MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
As long as my life is incomplete, I’ll live longer!Your life is incomplete. Although I don’t think you’ll fully appreciate him.
As long as my life is incomplete, I’ll live longer!Your life is incomplete. Although I don’t think you’ll fully appreciate him.
FYI, the ATIS will tell you which runway to expect and the tower will clear you for the runway they want you to use. Not your choice, but you can ask.Which brings up another irritation, pilots who continue to use given runway after a change in wind direction, because " that's what everybody else is using". Listen to ATIS people. If the wind favors a different runway, say something!
And if the AWOS/ASOS isn't there, fly overhead at least 500' above pattern altitude and use the Mark VII eyeball / wind sock(s) to assess wind direction & best runway.... Listen to ATIS people. If the wind favors a different runway, say something!
As long as we're ranting... I really dislike the use of the term "teardrop" for the midfield crossover to return on the 45. The FAA does not use that term for it. I understand the attraction of the term. It's short, but I cringe every time I hear it.The fun one is the teardrop entry call at a really busy pancake breakfast. I have no issue with that arrival. Just fun to hear that call when the "uhh" and "umm" start happening in the middle of the call.
The approach method was in existence long before the diagram. The problem is the way it's taught. I don't recall the use of the non-standard terminology "teardrop" until fairly recently.The problem is the FAA diagram. While it says descend then turn, the diagram shows turning and descending because the arrows are not prominent in the diagram.
Just like your upwind to crosswind (and for that matter any other entry you might choose), you need to be doing it properly which includes watching for other traffic. Doing the FAA's preferred method properly, you are above aircraft approaching on the 45 (discounting the ignored issue of jets using a 1500 AGL pattern), not descending until it's clear, and making a level (not descending) turn to join the 45.I still don't see the advantage of that descending pattern, heading directly into aircraft making a more standard midfield entry when simply joining the flow on the upwind side is easier and IMHO considerably safer. While I think it's best to go beyond the departure end for the crosswind, just flying the upwind to get a full view of the pattern can make it safe to cross over the runway to join the downwind.
I still don't see the advantage of that descending pattern, heading directly into aircraft making a more standard midfield entry when simply joining the flow on the upwind side is easier and IMHO considerably safer. While I think it's best to go beyond the departure end for the crosswind, just flying the upwind to get a full view of the pattern can make it safe to cross over the runway to join the downwind.
I use this all the time returning to the airport after towing gliders, because other gliders are all over the place and all of them have the ROW. I want to see them first and have the option of continuing on the upwind indefinitely (or simply exit the pattern) if there's a potential conflict.
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As long as we're ranting... I really dislike the use of the term "teardrop" for the midfield crossover to return on the 45. The FAA does not use that term for it. I understand the attraction of the term. It's short, but I cringe every time I hear it.
My problem is that it's not really a "teardrop entry," but it's often flown like one. The FAA talks about flying well clear (about 2 miles) from the pattern 500" above it, then descending to pattern altitude, then turning back for a 45. Flying It as described puts the airplane 3-5 miles (depending on speed) from the pattern before turning. Good.
But I've seen pilot after pilot treat it as a teardrop pattern maneuver. Maybe fly 2 miles from the airport (not from the pattern) and do a teardrop - a descending turn back toward the airport. Combine that with a busy pattern and Cessna 152s flying 737 patterns and it's too close and hazardous.
It seems calling it a teardrop entry leads to treating it as a teardrop entry.
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yeah, thisI still don't see the advantage of that descending pattern, heading directly into aircraft making a more standard midfield entry when simply joining the flow on the upwind side is easier and IMHO considerably safer. While I think it's best to go beyond the departure end for the crosswind, just flying the upwind to get a full view of the pattern can make it safe to cross over the runway to join the downwind.
I use this all the time returning to the airport after towing gliders, because other gliders are all over the place and all of them have the ROW. I want to see them first and have the option of continuing on the upwind indefinitely (or simply exit the pattern) if there's a potential conflict.
View attachment 120858
or maybe even better..... (or direct downwind entry if approaching from that side.....)Just like your upwind to crosswind (and for that matter any other entry you might choose), you need to be doing it properly which includes watching for other traffic. Doing the FAA's preferred method properly, you are above aircraft approaching on the 45 (discounting the ignored issue of jets using a 1500 AGL pattern), not descending until it's clear, and making a level (not descending) turn to join the 45.
But I've personally always preferred the direct crosswind to downwind unless the pattern was too busy to accommodate.
...the oral description matches the FAA's but the turnback really looks like a descending turn which is not what is orally described.
You really think student pilots would wonder who the pilot who ended a call with "left downwind Runway 32. Podunk" were talking to and why unless they added "traffic" at the very end?And I think the “traffic” thing has evolved as part of making students aware. Who are you talking to? Why?
No. I think it helps a new Flyer visualize that they are talking to other people in the pattern. I realize there can be too much specificity like every detail (guy in blue shirt, 87 Skylane has wobbly nose wheel 8 miles final) or whatever… but saying “traffic” just isn’t an issue. It is a targeting word. Are you this airports traffic? That means you! Student pilots will benefit from that one word more than any leather helmeted codger suffers.You really think student pilots would wonder who the pilot who ended a call with "left downwind Runway 32. Podunk" were talking to and why unless they added "traffic" at the very end?
Either that, or it makes radio communication more foreign to a student pilot, because you “are supposed to” structure Sentences in a way that you wouldn’t outside of an airplane. “Bob, I’m going to land, Bob.”No. I think it helps a new Flyer visualize that they are talking to other people in the pattern. I realize there can be too much specificity like every detail (guy in blue shirt, 87 Skylane has wobbly nose wheel 8 miles final) or whatever… but saying “traffic” just isn’t an issue. It is a targeting word. Are you this airports traffic? That means you! Student pilots will benefit from that one word more than any leather helmeted codger suffers.
No. I think it helps a new Flyer visualize that they are talking to other people in the pattern. I realize there can be too much specificity like every detail (guy in blue shirt, 87 Skylane has wobbly nose wheel 8 miles final) or whatever… but saying “traffic” just isn’t an issue. It is a targeting word. Are you this airports traffic? That means you! Student pilots will benefit from that one word more than any leather helmeted codger suffers.
If you say so. It’s already foreign by nature. Blasting around the skies isn’t normal albeit amazing. And I was taught “Airport name traffic, Cessna 123A turning left downwind, runway 22, full stop, airport name traffic”. I’ve heard plenty of variation on which turn to include landing intentions, all, final, etc. Regardless, the added “traffic” is not an issue in any way. Now telling a life story like the prior examples is different. No one needs to know what you had for breakfast and the color of your underpants.Either that, or it makes radio communication more foreign to a student pilot, because you “are supposed to” structure Sentences in a way that you wouldn’t outside of an airplane. “Bob, I’m going to land, Bob.”
and nowhere identifying the actual airport that you’re using.
So that's the reason. Just another CFI who teaches nonstandard communication as though it's important.And I was taught
Just one more example of someone being taught wrong then passing it on to others. I love it when students learn to challenge their CFIs for reasoning instead of dogma.So that's the reason. Just another CFI who teaches nonstandard communication as though it's important.
I agree....the oral description matches the FAA's but the turnback really looks like a descending turn which is not what is orally described.
Eventually it comes out. i stand by my post #48.So that's the reason. Just another CFI who teaches nonstandard communication as though it's important.
Yes, but the verbal book ending is intended to be X.It’s essentially verbal “book ending”. Start words equal end words. X Traffic - info - X Traffic. Humans do this kind of thing when following patterns. Are you technically correct? Yes the final traffic isn’t needed or correct. But if that extra “traffic” at the end really bothers you that much, you probably have bigger problems. Considering all the other offenses out there for bad airborne communication, a superfluous “traffic” at the end really doesn’t rate for me.
Like I said, you are technically right... But the start of the bookend on paper looks like “X Traffic” to a novice. And it’s a small thing compared to other possible grievances. Anyone who only has “he said traffic at the end. TRAFFIC!!! <gasp>” is flying in some accommodating airspace. But to each their own I guess. Lord knows there could be worse problems than the gift of flying with a chap on the radio who uses one word too many.Yes, but the verbal book ending is intended to be X.
It’s a slippery slope.Like I said, you are technically right... But the start of the bookend on paper looks like “X Traffic” to a novice. And it’s a small thing compared to other possible grievances. Anyone who only has “he said traffic at the end. TRAFFIC!!! <gasp>” is flying in some accommodating airspace. But to each their own I guess. Lord knows there could be worse problems than the gift of flying with a chap on the radio who uses one word too many.
The point the OP made was that the ending "traffic" is redundant.You really think student pilots would wonder who the pilot who ended a call with "left downwind Runway 32. Podunk" were talking to and why unless they added "traffic" at the very end?
Well you ain’t wrong. But it’s understandable to me why it happens. “Podunk” + “Traffic” may be two things but it sounds and feels like one…. “Podunk Traffic”. It’s just going to happen. I heard someone tying up the channel intentionally doing some weird Slingblade grunts over the radio a once. Eventually someone told them to stop. Five minutes of that was much worse than a bonus “traffic” now and again.The point the OP made was that the ending "traffic" is redundant.
As I stated, we are using some short hand. Podunk Traffic (who we are talking to), (this is IMPLIED) Cessna 123 (who we are), left downwind (where we are) for runway 01 (what we are going to do), (at) Podunk.
Adding the word traffic at the end is redundant and sounds strange to me.
When formation flying do you have a "convoy, good buddy"? Or, "Podunk traffic, Skylane 1234 at ramp... there's a Smokey at the north end doin' ramp checks!" edit to add "Podunk"I sometimes start with ....."breaker one nine"...."fly'n bertha ya got a copy?".
Me too, but that may be because it only started fairly recently. Or maybe it really IS strange, which I agree it is.Adding the word traffic at the end is redundant and sounds strange to me.
It’s been going on for well over a decade in parts of the country.but that may be because it only started fairly recently.
I’m more concerned with society’s failure to understand the difference between THEN and THAN. Pretty sure it indicates that the global IQ is in an uncontrolled descent.
Or VERSUS and VERSEOr LOOSE and LOSE
Pfffftttt. LolOr CRESCENT and ADJUSTABLE?