RyanShort1
Final Approach
So, I guess we need to find a place to make a petition to get this brought back to the old standard. What's the best place to make a petition and get the word out to pilots?
I've already reached out to a contact, but I'm also wanting to start a petition outside of AOPA.
Your congressman.I've already reached out to a contact, but I'm also wanting to start a petition outside of AOPA.
So, I guess we need to find a place to make a petition to get this brought back to the old standard. What's the best place to make a petition and get the word out to pilots?
This is what I was going to say. Find a list of Congressmen who are also pilots and email them all. Tell them how the FAA has just made flying near our borders less safe.Your congressman.
So here’s the documented “why”. FAA employee states it’s resource intensive, uneven, and delayed in currency. Seems the effort got started a few years ago.
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/fli...eign-Data-Depiction-Enroute-Visual-Charts.pdf
That sounds like a really bad idea. I often fly into private airports, as do a lot of the low-and-slow and experimental crowd, and not having my destination charted is a serious problem. Not to mention their emergency value...I'm not sure how to parse this, but from the September 8 charting notice:
Effective November 3, 2023, Visual Flight Rules (VFR) aeronautical charts will no longer make reference to emergency value in private airport charting.
Only private airports with landmark value will be retained and charted beyond February 23, 2023.
That sounds like a really bad idea. I often fly into private airports, as do a lot of the low-and-slow and experimental crowd, and not having my destination charted is a serious problem. Not to mention their emergency value...
Unlike a regulation change, presumably there is/was no public comment period... so who can we complain to?
Emails have been sent. I'll let you know when they get back to me. Ha!In all seriousness, I would say congress. They have a wide-open public comment period.
Some more ideas on to whom the safety implications could be pointed out:That sounds like a really bad idea. I often fly into private airports, as do a lot of the low-and-slow and experimental crowd, and not having my destination charted is a serious problem. Not to mention their emergency value...
Unlike a regulation change, presumably there is/was no public comment period... so who can we complain to?
Found it. It turns out that the end of the FAA's dual mandate (to both promote civil aviation and regulate safety issues) was requested by the Secretary of Transportation, but it got watered down somewhat in Congress when it passed Public Law 104-264:...I think it was after the ValuJet crash in the Florida Everglades that safety was made the sole purpose of the FAA. (I wonder if that was put in writing somewhere.)
Maybe the people who demand tax cuts and limited government were OK with you not receiving charts of other countries.For what we pay in taxes? I think we should be able to expect more from the FAA
Work……Have you dealt with many GS workers before?
Best bet is your congressman and reps, mention safety and the children and all that.
Being it’s nearly impossible to fire federal workers and this would require more of that 4 letter word “work”, I wouldn’t hold my breath
What exactly would one be cutting and pasting from Skyvector?Looks like you could cut, paste and print your own from Skyvector.
If you are looking for Mexico VFR charts, good luck. Doesn't exist on Foreflight
you can find the old WAC charts you can download and import as files on the internet with the right Google search. But Mexico doesn't have standard VFR charts
$10 says it’s motivated by some Elon musk type not wanting their private airfield on public charts who called their buddy to make it happen.
What exactly would one be cutting and pasting from Skyvector?
EDIT - I'll leave this in in case others make the same mistake I did, "Montreal" is a US Sectional. Thanks Russ R. Move the image so a Canadian portion is in the center. The Canadian VFR chart will show if you select it.Do you mind sharing the secret to getting Skyvector to show Canadian charts such as their VNCs?View attachment 113772
Move the image so a Canadian portion is in the center. The Canadian VFR chart will show if you select it.View attachment 113773
Move the image so a Canadian portion is in the center. The Canadian VFR chart will show if you select it.View attachment 113773
Right you are, it gets obvious if you zoom out. Oh well.Montreal is not a Canadian sectional. It is the name of one of the US sectionals.
What is it you need? The airports, VORs, and airspace is shown? If you tap on an airport you get the data. Your nav data in your RNAV is also valid.Do you mind sharing the secret to getting Skyvector to show Canadian charts such as their VNCs?
View attachment 113772
In post #106, you said that the solution to the title of this thread (“US Sectionals have lost foreign detail”) was for a person to cut and paste “a copy of the Canada chart” from Skyvector. I asked how to do that, and the answer is that it’s not possible because Skyvector does not provide Canada’s VNCs. As far as what people need, @Pilawt did a fairly succinct job in post #73 of showing with a picture why the loss of detail for land just across the border from the VFR sectional charts is a net loss to safety of flight for American pilots.What is it you need? The airports, VORs, and airspace is shown? If you tap on an airport you get the data. Your nav data in your RNAV is also valid.
In post #106, you said that the solution to the title of this thread (“US Sectionals have lost foreign detail”) was for a person to cut and paste “a copy of the Canada chart” from Skyvector. I asked how to do that, and the answer is that it’s not possible because Skyvector does not provide Canada’s VNCs. As far as what people need, @Pilawt did a fairly succinct job in post #73 of showing with a picture why the loss of detail for land just across the border from the VFR sectional charts is a net loss to safety of flight for American pilots.
So here’s the documented “why”. FAA employee states it’s resource intensive, uneven, and delayed in currency. Seems the effort got started a few years ago.
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/fli...eign-Data-Depiction-Enroute-Visual-Charts.pdf
I'm not sure Skyvector's source for low-altitude IFR charts outside the USA. The web interface does not identify the names of charts being shown, so they must have some kind of a worldwide base layer with a format similar to American IFR charts. They are definitely not the Canadian IFR charts.Check world low. The IFR charts are still there. If that isn’t adequate spend a couple dollars on a paper chart or stay in US airspace. Surely your safety is worth it.
I'm not sure Skyvector's source for low-altitude IFR charts outside the USA. The web interface does not identify the names of charts being shown, so they must have some kind of a worldwide base layer with a format similar to American IFR charts. They are definitely not the Canadian IFR charts.
Here is Skyvector's view of Winnipeg:
View attachment 113810
Here is what FltPlan.com provides:
View attachment 113811
You'll note that, among many other details, Skyvector's depiction of Canada provides next to no information about airspace.
Nor does an IFR chart help with VFR flying within the USA, especially the problem described in post #73. At least for Canada there are VFR charts available, although they are fairly inconvenient to get and tremendously inconvenient to use for flights that only go near the border, not across it. For Mexico, it sounds like there is presently no chart of any sort available to civilians that provides any VFR information for the Mexican side of the border.
The problem is not flying internationally. It is a change to American charts that makes it less safe to fly in America.Maybe if you are going to fly internationally it is past time for you to get and use an instrument rating.