Why is there class D airspace around SeaTac's inner class B airspace? This seems uncommon to me.
It's active by NOTAM. I suspect it has to do with Puget Sound seaplane traffic.Why is there class D airspace around SeaTac's inner class B airspace? This seems uncommon to me.
The hours of operation are by notam.
I edited my post to include an image from foreflight. You’d see the same on the sectional chart legend.Oh. I couldn’t find even that.
I edited my post to include an image from foreflight. You’d see the same on the sectional chart legend.
There is a fairly large area southeast of BFI where the tower airspace of SEA. BFI, and RTN overlap. It is a practical impossibility to talk to three controllers at the same time. I attended the meetings when the dimensions of the original KSEA Class B airspace were being determined and I do not recall Class D entering into those discussions (it has been several decades). I'm sure that there is a Letter of Agreement between the three towers that explains it all in excruciating detail,but such LOAs are hard to find by Joe Sixpack. IMHO kkoran's post tells us all that we can know.
Bob
The Class D’s tell you who you need to be talking to. BFI’s is a really convoluted one. Does the normal circle thing from the West, clockwise to North and then takes a turn South and creates a wedge in between SEA’s and RNT’s. It goes as far South as the South end of SEA’s runways. Do you remember if Seattle’s original Class B had a Surface Area that followed the shoreline to the West like it does today?