While we are in Portland, notice the word Speedway just to the north of that spot on the map. According to Google Maps, there is a historic speedway there. To the north of that, there is a magenta diamond shape. WTF is the Magenta diamond? -Skip
They apparently wanted the land area of Swan Island in the Charlie surface area. My guess is for helicopter traffic serving the industrial areas.
Maybe for the occasional seaplane in the channel?That I can understand, but why the cutout for the waterway?
Maybe for the occasional seaplane in the channel?
Perhaps the official description of the Class C surface area says something like "five-mile radius arc from the center of PDX, clockwise to the east bank of the Willamette River, then following the shoreline of the Willamette River to a point x degrees from thus-and-so, then five-mile radius arc ... "
At no point does the Charlie surface area extend into the Willamette River, even though parts of it are less than 5 nm from the airport. I've scooted along the west bank of the river many times, outside the Charlie.
In case anybody is interested, here is the official description from the 7400.11D:
That airspace extending upward from the surface to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 5-mile radius of Portland International Airport, excluding that airspace within a 1-mile radius of Evergreen North-South Airpark and that airspace from the 003° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark clockwise to the 105° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark, and excluding that airspace up to but not including 1,100 feet MSL in an area bounded by a line beginning at the point where the 019° bearing from Pearson Field intersects the 5-mile arc from Portland International Airport extending southeast to a point 1\1/2\ miles east of Pearson Field on the extended centerline of Runway 8/26 and thence south to the north shore of the Columbia River and thence west via the north shore of the Columbia River to the 5-mile arc from Portland International; and excluding that airspace west of the east bank of the Willamette River; and that airspace extending upward from 2,000 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of Portland International Airport from the 004° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 093° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,700 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10- mile radius of the airport from the 093° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 196° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 2,300 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL from the 196° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 268° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,800 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of the airport from the 268° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 004° bearing from the airport.
That airspace extending upward from the surface to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 5-mile radius of Portland International Airport, excluding that airspace within a 1-mile radius of Evergreen North-South Airpark and that airspace from the 003° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark clockwise to the 105° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark, and excluding that airspace up to but not including 1,100 feet MSL in an area bounded by a line beginning at the point where the 019° bearing from Pearson Field intersects the 5-mile arc from Portland International Airport extending southeast to a point 1\1/2\ miles east of Pearson Field on the extended centerline of Runway 8/26 and thence south to the north shore of the Columbia River and thence west via the north shore of the Columbia River to the 5-mile arc from Portland International; and excluding that airspace west of the east bank of the Willamette River; and that airspace extending upward from 2,000 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of Portland International Airport from the 004° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 093° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,700 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10- mile radius of the airport from the 093° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 196° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 2,300 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL from the 196° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 268° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,800 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of the airport from the 268° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 004° bearing from the airport.
LOL, I was just about to post this same 1500 page reference, but it looks like you beat me to it by a few hoursIn case anybody is interested, here is the official description from the 7400.11D:
That airspace extending upward from the surface to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 5-mile radius of Portland International Airport, excluding that airspace within a 1-mile radius of Evergreen North-South Airpark and that airspace from the 003° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark clockwise to the 105° bearing from Evergreen North-South Airpark, and excluding that airspace up to but not including 1,100 feet MSL in an area bounded by a line beginning at the point where the 019° bearing from Pearson Field intersects the 5-mile arc from Portland International Airport extending southeast to a point 1\1/2\ miles east of Pearson Field on the extended centerline of Runway 8/26 and thence south to the north shore of the Columbia River and thence west via the north shore of the Columbia River to the 5-mile arc from Portland International; and excluding that airspace west of the east bank of the Willamette River; and that airspace extending upward from 2,000 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of Portland International Airport from the 004° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 093° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,700 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10- mile radius of the airport from the 093° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 196° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 2,300 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL from the 196° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 268° bearing from the airport, and that airspace extending upward from 1,800 feet MSL to and including 4,000 feet MSL within a 10-mile radius of the airport from the 268° bearing from the airport clockwise to the 004° bearing from the airport.
Have you been to Portland? Based on the percentage of really screwed up people there, weird stuff is expected...
Looking at Google Maps, I see some significant sized ships berthed in that area. Ships that could have helicopters land? I don't immediately spot any helipads though. Nor could I figure out why they wouldn't just square it up rather than leave a sliver of Class C to the surface over than small peninsula. To me its like either make it all Class C, or not at all.
Looks like Swan island. Probably a 'visual' shelf to assist the little sightseeing choppers.
Considering all of the talking over-educated under-experienced phalluses I live near here, it stands to reason that the PDX Class C would have a dong.
“...5-mile arc from Portland International; and excluding that airspace west of the east bank of the Willamette River;”This is what it’s supposed to look like. I’ll give credit to Lorena Bobbit for doing it right.
View attachment 82182
Of all the sources mentioned here, I think the OP's screenshot of what appears to be the Portland TAC would be the "most correct". All of the 3rd party renditions seem to be a bit suspicious.
LOL, I was just about to post this same 1500 page reference, but it looks like you beat me to it by a few hours
For what it’s worth, I used to download a copy of 7400.10, special use airspace, to keep on my iPad back in the days before ForeFlight included SUAS details. Oh how we’re spoiled these days...
The charting around that area has all kinds of boo boos. Here’s a fun one. What class of airspace is KVUO in. Just look at the Chart. Save the A/FD and the 7400.11 for later.
The charting around that area has all kinds of boo boos. Here’s a fun one. What class of airspace is KVUO in. Just look at the Chart. Save the A/FD and the 7400.11 for later.
KVUO used to be the only Class D in the country with no operating control tower anywhere in it. A few years ago they changed it from a Class D area to Class E with a Part 93 special flight rule, and tweaked the adjoining Class E surface area boundary a bit. But it didn't change the VFR procedure at KVUO, which requires callup to ATC- on the Pearson CTAF - before entering the area or before departure to get a wake turbulence advisory vis-à-vis PDX jet traffic. After the initial callup it's just like any other uncontrolled field.Based on the note regarding part 93 (subpart N) you're pretty much obligated to go off chart to figure out what's going on. But it's class E to the surface (formerly class D) with a communication requirement for communicating with advisory on the CTAF frequency.
Based on the note regarding part 93 (subpart N) you're pretty much obligated to go off chart to figure out what's going on. But it's class E to the surface (formerly class D) with a communication requirement for communicating with advisory on the CTAF frequency.
Nothing more need be said.
...But the Chart does depict KVUO in Class G airspace....
What about the class E area surface area depicted to the west of VUO? The fact that the magenta dashed line terminates at the class C surface area implies that VUO is inside the class E, since it is not inside the class C surface area. I admit that the depiction is confusing, however.
This is a unique situation. Yes, there is only one Class E surface area, but only part of it (the part that used to be the VUO Delta) is the new SFRA. How to chart it? They probably just took the easy route and used the old chart and added the new extension to the west.Yeah. The logic check dictates VUO is in Class E Surface Area. That E Surface Area does not terminate at the edge of the C Surface Area though. It is not an E Surface Area extension to a C Surface Area. That one out to the Northeast is, but not the one to the West. That one IS the VUO Surface Area and it does not stop at the C core Surface Area. It continues farther to the East quite a bit farther than the VUO 'cutout,' but the map makers don't chart it that way.
This is a unique situation. Yes, there is only one Class E surface area, but only part of it (the part that used to be the VUO Delta) is the new SFRA. How to chart it? They probably just took the easy route and used the old chart and added the new extension to the west.
https://notams.aim.faa.gov/lta/main/viewlta?lookupid=1395914060330964778
"Note: The SFRA replaces the previous Pearson Field Class D airspace with the same dimensions."