The problem with that is ‘Piper’ could be anything from a Tomahawk to a Malibu. Best to differentiate at least somewhat as to the model you’re flying, rather than just ‘Piper’ as it’s too broad.
"Uh, Cessna three seven tango, you appear to be flying upside down."
If I fly a 90's Tiger (American General) I, and most people I hear, call it a Grumman. When flying a Debonair I've been called a Bonanza, which is understandable. When flying a Bonanza I've been called a Debonair and even a Baron.
Much.Better?
Same thing for Cessna. Anything from a 150 to a 210. Can't say I've heard many 210's referred to as "Centurion N1234"The problem with that is ‘Piper’ could be anything from a Tomahawk to a Malibu. Best to differentiate at least somewhat as to the model you’re flying, rather than just ‘Piper’ as it’s too broad.
What do you call it? Twin Beech xxxx?Try flying a Beech 18.
I’ve been called a Bonanza, a Baron, a Duke and a Beechjet. Probably been called a Beechjet the most.
I'll let you fellas in on a little secret: A lot of today's controllers don't know a Cessna from a Cesspool. They all go by the speed indicated on their radar. I remember I was training someone in local control (tower for the people who don't know the jargon) when a H-60 helicopter was inbound on a PAR approach. In the data block was P7X which switches back and forth from the approach to the type aircraft. The P stood for PAR approach, the 7 was the channel he was talking on to the PAR controller, the X meant that he was going back to Phoenix after his approach. When the trainee was attempting to give traffic to someone else on the helicopter, he caught it at the right time when it was on the approach flash. "Traffic is a pea seven ex on a five mile final."
So unless the controller is a good one that can differentiate aircraft by sight (which is few and far between these days) don't take it personally when they call you something you aren't. A lot of times it isn't their fault, they just call you whatever the person who typed your information into the computer which spit out your transponder code. That may have been quite a few controllers ago.
Funny thing about the strip. I got a call recently asking me to confirm that I was a Grumman Tiger. I answered affirmative and they said "yeah, the guy who made your strip had you as a G-44 Amphib." That was hilarious.
You know (most of us anyway) are just joking . That said, it is kind of important to tell the difference between a Cherokee and a SkyHawk ;-).
Funny thing about the strip. I got a call recently asking me to confirm that I was a Grumman Tiger. I answered affirmative and they said "yeah, the guy who made your strip had you as a G-44 Amphib." That was hilarious.
Of course the 210 had been in production for four years before the name "Centurion" was ever applied to it (1964 210D). "Skyhawk" was first used in 1961, but until 1976 that name only referred to an optional equipment package available for 172s.Can't say I've heard many 210's referred to as "Centurion N1234"