NoHeat
Final Approach
In another thread, one poster said a VFR flight plan is "useless" and another proposed a need for a new thread to challenge that view. So here's the new thread.
What's your opinion?
What's your opinion?
this is going to be an interesting thread.
full disclosure - I use both flight plan and FF when I am going somewhere. though I will admit, in more than 1 occasion I have filed the plan and forgot the activate after run up
not useless at all, IMO but i usually didn’t file unless my flight was longer than 50nm. the rental company required a flight plan for the same 50nm flights; someone else was aware of where and when i was going and would come looking should i fail to arrive.In another thread, one poster said a VFR flight plan is "useless" and another proposed a need for a new thread to challenge that view. So here's the new thread.
What's your opinion?
but that was winter.. this is springBeen discussed many times, guess it's due again. Y'all have fun with it.
VFR Flight Plans, useless or not?
It depends on the TFR. For the dreaded 30 mile TFR better be on an active flight plan of some sort.I am pretty sure one needs to be filed if a flight into or in a TFR is planned. It doesn't have to be activated.
It's pointless unless you crash and nobody sees or knows about it.
Decide for yourself how worried you are about that and act accordingly.
Flight plans are moderately helpful if you are overdue. They get the SAR process started faster, but the first part of that process is phone calls. If I recall correctly, it usually takes 24 hours to get a search started unless there's another big piece of evidence, like ATC losing radar contact unexpectedly.
Since it's so easy to activate my flightplan through ForeFlight, I estimate my take off time and activate before leaving the FBO's Wi-Fi signal.
In another thread, one poster said a VFR flight plan is "useless" and another proposed a need for a new thread to challenge that view. So here's the new thread.
What's your opinion?
In another thread, one poster said a VFR flight plan is "useless" and another proposed a need for a new thread to challenge that view. So here's the new thread.
What's your opinion?
In another thread, one poster said a VFR flight plan is "useless" and another proposed a need for a new thread to challenge that view. So here's the new thread.
What's your opinion?
Flight plans are moderately helpful if you are overdue. They get the SAR process started faster, but the first part of that process is phone calls. If I recall correctly, it usually takes 24 hours to get a search started unless there's another big piece of evidence, like ATC losing radar contact unexpectedly.
Since it's so easy to activate my flightplan through ForeFlight, I estimate my take off time and activate before leaving the FBO's Wi-Fi signal.
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Here in the middle of nowhere SAR is activated after 30 mins, ask me how I know it
I did some night search missions, so waiting for daylight wasn't a factor in search delays. Maybe it is now? Or in some locales? They never exactly had their act together during my time with them, and getting the ball rolling then (2013 and earlier) could be really sloooow.
SAR, or someone starts making calls? AFRCC has their procedures and regulations, and when I was last active (5 years ago) those procedures did not include starting a search until they'd called the pilot, their home, the destination airport, and the home airport. VFR flight plan gets a search started in about 24 hours vs. about 48-72 hours if there's no flight plan.
I'm talking strictly about an overdue aircraft on a VFR flight plan. An active ELT or plane going off of radar unexpectedly are different triggers for a search.
I say this as someone who's taken the AFRCC SAR course and run countless searches from my living and mission bases.
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Gee, not useless, really, but not all that important, either. Don't know about now, but before I left CAP behind a few years ago, I did some night search missions, so waiting for daylight wasn't a factor in search delays. Maybe it is now? Or in some locales?
At the company I work for we are required to file either an IFR or VFR flight plan. If I go down it is nice to know the coast guard will be out in their jayhawks in 45 minutes and it is even nicer to know the closest CAP squadron is 700 miles away.
At the company I work for we are required to file either an IFR or VFR flight plan. If I go down it is nice to know the coast guard will be out in their jayhawks in 45 minutes and it is even nicer to know the closest CAP squadron is 700 miles away.