OMG, Here comes HOWTU LOGGG PEEYEC
PPOAA THRED LOKED
HOWTU LOGGG PEEYEC
HHIGH WINGZ SUUCK
GETTA BNNZA YUWUD LKGUD IINNA DUUKE PERMA BANNN INBFR THLOKDude. Yer like in the inner circle. Come up with something for us. Like PPOAA THRED LOKED
Ah ha. There is. There is a HADES.Ever consider the theological implications of being cleared "direct to Paradise" ... ?
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That works. But there are 26 letters and only 10 digits, so the all letter thing makes for a lot more possibilities. Of course the 'pronounceability' thing is an issue. How prounceable some of the ones we all ready have is a stretch.Many countries preserve fix names by using combo alpha/numeric fixes for IAPs. Such as:
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This a case of it's both whatcha know and who ya knowAnd, in the Bishop area:
WALLE is the RNP AR 30 FAF.
JAAKE is the RNAV 12 FAF. Jake was my maternal grandfather who built a cabin in the area before I was born. I spent some great times at that cabin.
RBRTS is on V230 and one of the IAFs for the RNAV 12.
I received these Bishop area fixes because of my work with an FAA/Industry committee that finalized RNP AR. We each got to pick a terrain-challenged airport for the launch of RNP AR. I picked Bishop. The FAA TERPs rep on the committee and I were (and are) good friends.
I got WALLY at KEMT in the 1970s because I made a deal with the TERPs guru in the Western Pacific Regional Office (IAPs were designed in the regions in those days). I made a bet with him that I could get a VOR/DME IAP to fit from the west, yet avoid the LAX Class B. I won the bet so he found WALLY reserved in the Eastern Region. He made a swap.
They don't use it for fixes that may have to be reported to ATC.That works. But there are 26 letters and only 10 digits, so the all letter thing makes for a lot more possibilities. Of course the 'pronounceability' thing is an issue. How prounceable some of the ones we all ready have is a stretch.
The IAF's are the 2 alpha 3 digit form. Like GT599. Seems like that would be reportable to ATC. All the fixes on that chart AA###'s. I don't get it.They don't use it for fixes that may have to be reported to ATC.
The IAF's are the 2 alpha 3 digit form. Like GT599. Seems like that would be reportable to ATC. All the fixes on that chart AA###'s. I don't get it.
Yeah. Spelling out our 5 letterers(i'll be danged, letterer is a word) seems to be the norm rather than the exception.I don't know the answer to the question, but with the number of challenging pronunciations now anyway, I don't know that it would be a big deal to have ATC say "cleared direct Golf Tango 5 9 9".
Those IAFs are at the end of STARs.The IAF's are the 2 alpha 3 digit form. Like GT599. Seems like that would be reportable to ATC. All the fixes on that chart AA###'s. I don't get it.
Ah. Now I get it.Those IAFs are at the end of STARs.
The three fixes leading up to BUXOM are MYCRO, BBREW and PUBBB. On the other side is HHOPZ and WIDMR for Widmer Bros Brewing. Portland is the Brew Pub Capitol of the World.
So I said to myself, huh, whats that about? Ask him I said. Is that about somebody? But I decided to just google it. Ya learn something new everyday. Now what I wanna know is, is that a common North Carolinian colloquialism?I don’t know but the hero that used SHART will always be on the list of people I want to meet.
I have meet people from places far away from NC that were aware of the term. Don’t think we can claim “shart” as our invention.So I said to myself, huh, whats that about? Ask him I said. Is that about somebody? But I decided to just google it. Ya learn something new everyday. Now what I wanna know is, is that a common North Carolinian colloquialism?
Some instrument fix names are obvious, like NEWMY directly over the town of Newman, or LODGE over....Lodge.
Others certainly appear to be the product of Terps Elves having fun.
The one that made me wonder is our RNAV 14L here at CMI. RRRED, GRANJ, ORANJ, & BLLUE all make perfect sense to fans and alumni of the university of Illinois, but I wouldn't necessarily expect a random terpster to come up with them.
Is there local input on fix names, or did we just get lucky enough to have an alumnus name them? Perhaps they do some local research to come up with the names?
That's really coolBack in '01 or so...we had a Chief Pilot who went west in his sleep one night...was the local DPE, did phase checks (when the school was 141), and was just one of those "quiet birdmen" who had more hours in his log, certs all the way from ASEL to multi rotorcraft...a real pilot's pilot. Unflappable. You always wanted to fly with him...you learned something new every time. He didn't climb into the plane as much as put it on like a well-fitting suit jacket. We all felt his loss keenly.
The FAF into the field was named "KOINE". I called up the FAA charting folks...and asked if or how we could go about having the fix renamed in his honor. They said "send a letter on airport stationery, requesting the change from KOINE to what we settled on "DFRTZ" (his name was Doug Fritz...but signed logs "DFritz"). Next revision came out, and the FAF intersection was changed.
The date it became active...took his widow and son on probably the shortest filed IFR trip I've ever flown...from the field to Solberg, procedure turn home, descend to intermediate altitude, and ATC called the intersection (I had called them before hand to let them know what we were doing and why) and cleared us for the approach...and we were 'officially' the first flight through it under ATC control. (I also had the chart framed and gave it to the widow)
It's not as hard as you think... The FAA was actually very helpful and supportive about it. Think of it...we pay for the service...and sometimes they make it easy to work with them.
See post #8IFALN ANDYE CAANT GDUPP
file:///C:/Users/bucko/AppData/Local/Temp/KLOU-RNAV%2033-1.PDF
Yup, there it is, I had forgot that one up in your post #8.See post #8
In other news, I sent these in to the IFR magazine 'over the air" segment. I was excited to see them come out in the Feb issue.
They printed the first 7/8 of my email and then cut off those four
Could be a new Approach or DP also. There are some under development and pending. I suppose you could get an existing fix renamed, but that would probably be harder.We've got an ops guy at LGA that finally retired after 52 years with the airline. Great guy - everyone loved him. There's a plan to have a fix named for him once LGA gets some new arrivals (whenever that happens to be). Hope it happens, he deserves it.