Oh without a doubt. At least when I'm wrong I can man up and admit it...
Admitting that you are wrong buys you nothing in a nitpickety nitpickery fight on the internet.
Oh without a doubt. At least when I'm wrong I can man up and admit it...
Admitting that you are wrong buys you nothing in a nitpickety nitpickery fight on the internet.
If you take off with a VFR flight plan and pick up an IFR clearance en-route, you will still have to cancel the VFR portion of the flight plan after landing.
Ahhhh.Wow....... Out of all that, you take issue with the post count??
We are clearly internettin' now.
I wasn't questioning your ability to post count.
You essentially said "How a post like this goes over 140 posts?"
To that question I replied with a very simple, or so I thought, picture..
Let's try it again...
Is the requirement to "remain VFR" that would have come with the VFR flight plan still applicable once you've picked up the IFR clearance? If so, if clouds are penetrated or VFR clearances busted, what sort of enforcement action could/should one expect with regards to their license/certificate and associated ratings?
Ahhhh.
But I guess you make the point for the need for clarity in communication. Thanks.
No because it's an IFR flight plan now.
thar ya go again!
I can play this like Lionel Richie.. All night long..
Check this out.. I got flight following through some C today...
you're a fast learner
If you don't close it they will start calling to locate you pretty shortly. Sometimes even when you do
I wonder if they have some sort of display that shows them upcoming departures even for vfr flight plans, so they knew I was coming before I called. (seemed like it).
Anyone who has spent anytime in a simulator will be familiar with the phrase (or one similar to it) "real world vs sim world." That is essentially to say "while everything is supposed to be by the book, the real world often isn't" and that is summed up with your statement - your mileage may vary.
So true about the sim. Can humble anyone. Hated that thing!
Been out of ATC since '88, but I don't recall "strips" for VFR flights coming out of the printer. Maybe it does now though.
Especially when we had to do it every 6 months. We nicknamed it a "job check". Fortunately my airline had a great training department and realistic IPs.
Yep.. I remember when the opportunity to lose your job every 6 months was too much.. I got out of 121 flying and now have the opportunity every 5 weeks......
EVERY 5 weeks? Why?
Sometimes I get the feeling that pilots, especially new ones, expect ATC techniques to be the same. Everywhere. While ATC is more consistent than the population of pilots, there are local procedures, some published, some not, and differences between how controllers handle a certain situation. Just because something works one time is not an assurance that it will work another time in another location.
"...say location of Shea Stadium.""Taxi towards Shea stadium, hold short of the white pavement facing the flag..."
"...say location of Shea Stadium."
"...say location of Shea Stadium."
Nuclear generation is serious business, apparently. I don't fly primarily for food anymore.
Soooo what do you fly?, for the gov?, you won't kill me by asking willya?
Play "FO"? What's that mean? Down by Dothan? Nosy aren't I. I'm south of B'ham a bit.
They do, and they did in '88 too, but these are not VFR flight plans filed with FSS.
When filing a flight plan if "VFR" is selected as the type of flight plan the data stays with FSS.
If "IFR" is selected the data goes to ATC. If "VFR" is entered as the altitude there'll be strips for VFR flights coming out of the printer.
You are confusing me with this statement. You say "They do" in answer to the question that VFR flights come out of a printer, and then follow that up with "these are not VFR flight plans". The post he was replying to was my post regarding a VFR flight plan which the tower seemed to already know about, before I called them.
Been out of ATC since '88, but I don't recall "strips" for VFR flights coming out of the printer. Maybe it does now though.