PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
700 nm not a long enough cross country in a Cherokee for ya?
If the wind difference from 3,000 to 3,500 causes you a problem, you are cutting it much too close.
700 nm not a long enough cross country in a Cherokee for ya?
I've had a controller ask me to climb from 3,000 to 3,500. I just said "ok". I really didn't think twice about it. I mostly don't worry about winds aloft unless I am going on a long cross country. I think you are working yourself up over nothing.
What! You didn’t put up a fight, argue, or call when you landed? That 500 feet could have killed you. You need to be more confrontational.
Cutting what too close? I stop with 15-20 gallons left in my tanks.If the wind difference from 3,000 to 3,500 causes you a problem, you are cutting it much too close.
So I'm headed north east from Texas to Illinois last Friday and it was a great day to fly. I'm on FF cruising along at 3,000ft above Oklahoma because it was early, so it was smooth, and I had a 6 knot tailwind.
Foreflight was predicting no tailwind at 3,500 and a headwind at 5,500
When handed off to a new sector, the controller comes on and asks if "Are you going to fly at a VFR altitude?"
I respond "Affirmative, I'm at a VFR altitude"
He responds, "Actually you aren't"
I responded "Actually I am, but I will climb to 3,500"
Airport below me is at 812ft, putting me 2,188 ft above the earth....according to 91.159 I'm at a VFR altitude.
I had a couple of choices with this guy, climb to 3,500 and check to see if I still had my tailwind, or just cancel FF and continue on my way.
I climbed to 3,500, lost about half my tailwind but remained there and stewed for the 40 minutes to I got handed off to Razorback approach who didn't care what altitude I was at as long as I "remained VFR"
If the guy had issues with radar coverage at that altitude, he should have told me that like they do in certain sectors I fly a lot.
What say the peanut gallery?
I would have said to the controller "below 3000AGL any altitude I want is VFR, unless OK is somehow below sea level now. I have a number for you to call advise when ready to copy."
I've seen a 20kt change in ground speed in a 500' altitude change before.If the wind difference from 3,000 to 3,500 causes you a problem, you are cutting it much too close.
At 3,000 feet you had a 20 knot difference? That's usually some nasty weather. The bottom line is if he didn't want to do something like this, just say no. I suspect the controller did it so he doesn't have to make a dozen more callouts while he has the guy. In any case, if someone gets worked up enough to think about calling the controller over this they are a little high strung.I've seen a 20kt change in ground speed in a 500' altitude change before.
700/100 vs 700/120.
Thats over an hour difference.
I wouldn’t have climbed to 2700.I might have just descended to 2700 or so. It's Oklahoma, and that controller is putting everyone else at 3,500 . . .
At 3,000 feet you had a 20 knot difference? That's usually some nasty weather. The bottom line is if he didn't want to do something like this, just say no. I suspect the controller did it so he doesn't have to make a dozen more callouts while he has the guy. In any case, if someone gets worked up enough to think about calling the controller over this they are a little high strung.
On top of that, in this case is was a change from a 7 knot tailwind to a 3 knot tailwind. That was 12 minutes at 100 versus 103 knots if I believe he went 7 hours in a cherokee. Winds aloft probably vary by 3 times that at 3000 feet on their own, especially over 700 miles. One of the advantages of having an actual wind vector read out in your avionics, you can see how much the winds aloft vary over a relatively short distance down low and understand how bad the winds aloft forecasts are. Then he didn't tell the guy 3,000 is a vfr altitude because he could "tell" that by his "attitude" the guy was going to drop him if he didn't climb? This is a mountain out of a molehill.
Nope, just a temperature inversion at night. Dead-*** calm up to 3000. But at 3000 the winds were whipping along. As for the rest of it, yeah, 4 knots is a yawner. But even 10 knots on the longest leg I've done (925nm) in the Comanche made a difference. It was the difference between a fuel stop and no fuel stop. I had an hour of fuel left when I landed, but had I not gotten than 10 extra knots, I would have been below fuel reserves.
I know a couple of ZFW controllers....I'm not going to get a guy called in over it. More venting than anything. I even looked up the FAR number and had a "speech" planned when he handed me off. I wussed out and just didn't thank him as I usually do at handoff.
That was 12 minutes at 100 versus 103 knots if I believe he went 7 hours in a cherokee. Then he didn't tell the guy 3,000 is a vfr altitude because he could "tell" that by his "attitude" the guy was going to drop him if he didn't climb? This is a mountain out of a molehill.
I use it all the time, it's nice to have, but I would never tell my wife or let her dictate that it's a go / no-go deal.
[/QUOTE]First off, reread my initial post. I was asking for advice as to what people here thought. Secondly, you question if I went 7 hours in a Cherokee? It's a 180, I true out about 118 knots, not 103. It was actually a 6 hour flight up and 6.5 coming back on Monday.
Third, I fly it around 250 hours a year from Mexico to North Dakota. It's also why I'm in the midst of upgrading to a faster plane where I don't worry about a 4 knot difference. But that's another story. You want my tail number so you can see my actual flights this weekend or over the last year?
I didn't make it a mountain, you did. I simply asked a question.
You do your life, I'll do mine. My wife's happiness is very important to me, and her comfort with me flying is also very important to me. I get it, you "rule" your house. I'm sure you come home and complain the dishes aren't done as well.
I think you might be the first person I will mute on here.
I had a couple of choices with this guy, climb to 3,500 and check to see if I still had my tailwind, or just cancel FF and continue on my way.
"Honey, I love you, but flying decisions are not a 50/50 deal up for discussion. If you want that you need to go get your license."
I meant that for my wife, but give it a whirl and report back, please, lol.There's a certain approach controller at MCO that I'll have to try that line on....
When flying outta here, the controllers are like PEACE! Now when flying in the southeast, I got called out on altitude, and flight following suddenly became mandatory or the norm.
You had a third option..."I am below 3000' AGL...need me higher for some reason"
This for the win - well said.Being able to resolve simple misunderstandings on freq in a non-confrontational way is an important skill.
Did you call?I'll call tomorrow. Have the coordinates and time where I made the climb from Foreflight and flight aware.
How common is IFR traffic at 3000' msl?
How common is IFR traffic at 3000' msl?
Seriously? Call over this?
To each his own. In the grand scheme of things, it don't make a bit of difference.If it helps resolve a misunderstanding that a controller has....why not? It's a team effort, we're not suggesting filing a lawsuit.
Exactly. And this may have been the basis for the controller’s statement. He may well have known it was “legal” to be VFR at 3,000 but it may well have caused him issues with IFR traffic on approaches - actual or practiced.Pretty common in the flat lands. IAFs around here are almost all 3000 or below, so it's descend and maintain 3000 A LOT.
Sounds more like the Controller didn't know and was doing it out of ignoranceExactly. And this may have been the basis for the controller’s statement. He may well have known it was “legal” to be VFR at 3,000 but it may well have caused him issues with IFR traffic on approaches - actual or practiced.
I’ve personally had a lot of success just calling and ASKING rather than telling; done that way, unknown reasons often pop up and it then makes sense. On occasion it’s a “learning moment” for ATC and they’ve been very gracious about it. But it’s good to remember I’m not personally the only one in the sky on their scope.
Yup. And the Controller isn't going to get in trouble. He'll just learn something and not waste his and a pilots time in the future.If it helps resolve a misunderstanding that a controller has....why not? It's a team effort, we're not suggesting filing a lawsuit.
Exactly. And this may have been the basis for the controller’s statement. He may well have known it was “legal” to be VFR at 3,000 but it may well have caused him issues with IFR traffic on approaches - actual or practiced.
I’ve personally had a lot of success just calling and ASKING rather than telling; done that way, unknown reasons often pop up and it then makes sense. On occasion it’s a “learning moment” for ATC and they’ve been very gracious about it. But it’s good to remember I’m not personally the only one in the sky on their scope.