NelsonMinar
Filing Flight Plan
Is there a good rule of thumb for figuring out traffic sequencing when several airplanes are arriving from different directions at an untowered airport?
I'm a student pilot, a couple of weeks from taking my checkride. Most of my training has been at towered airports. When I've visited untowered airports I'm not always sure how to fit myself in to the pattern. Ie: at Lodi (1O3) the other day I was just entering downwind in a Skyhawk when someone called in "Aeronca Chief on 5 mile final". I had no idea who should go first, even though I knew where he was and where I was I couldn't quite figure it out. So I asked and he politely told me I had plenty of time to land ahead of him. (Later I got to speak wtih the pilot and once I learned that his Chief is going about 60mph on approach I understood why I had time )
What I'm looking for is some rule of thumb. Like "it takes 4 minutes for a Skyhawk to fly a standard pattern", or "downwind to off the runway takes 3 minutes", or "extending downwind 1 minute makes room for another plane to land". It seems particularly tricky when you have a mix of planes of different speeds.
I should add I'm not in a hurry out there, not interested in figuring out if I can cut ahead of someone. Just looking for how to turn my knowledge of where other planes are into a picture of where they're going.
I'm a student pilot, a couple of weeks from taking my checkride. Most of my training has been at towered airports. When I've visited untowered airports I'm not always sure how to fit myself in to the pattern. Ie: at Lodi (1O3) the other day I was just entering downwind in a Skyhawk when someone called in "Aeronca Chief on 5 mile final". I had no idea who should go first, even though I knew where he was and where I was I couldn't quite figure it out. So I asked and he politely told me I had plenty of time to land ahead of him. (Later I got to speak wtih the pilot and once I learned that his Chief is going about 60mph on approach I understood why I had time )
What I'm looking for is some rule of thumb. Like "it takes 4 minutes for a Skyhawk to fly a standard pattern", or "downwind to off the runway takes 3 minutes", or "extending downwind 1 minute makes room for another plane to land". It seems particularly tricky when you have a mix of planes of different speeds.
I should add I'm not in a hurry out there, not interested in figuring out if I can cut ahead of someone. Just looking for how to turn my knowledge of where other planes are into a picture of where they're going.