petersfreeman
Filing Flight Plan
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- Dec 3, 2018
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petersfreeman
I am a writer completing a fictional novel that involves my characters in an MD-11F on a flight from Minneapolis to Washington Dulles airport. The pilot needs to contact an ATC while somewhere over Cleveland, Ohio, then later while over Pittsburgh, and later approaching Dulles. Here are my questions/assumptions:
While over Cleveland, I assume the pilot would be in communication with Cleveland ATC. How would they address that ATC? Likewise for Pittsburgh? Likewise for Dulles? My first stab at it would be:
Pilot: CLEVELAND, FED-EX ONE FOUR NINE ROMEO, OVER
Cleveland ATF: FED-EX ONE FOUR NINE ROMEO, CLEVELAND
I assume line of sight range for VHF radio communications. As the aircraft travels towards Dulles airport, when could I expect the pilot to be in range of the Dulles ATC?
The pilot has a problem, not at the point where they would use the MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY call, but they would at least call PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN
I assume that is what they would use as that would be what a nautical person would use in a situation that is not at present life threatening, but could develop into one.
Thank you for your advice.
While over Cleveland, I assume the pilot would be in communication with Cleveland ATC. How would they address that ATC? Likewise for Pittsburgh? Likewise for Dulles? My first stab at it would be:
Pilot: CLEVELAND, FED-EX ONE FOUR NINE ROMEO, OVER
Cleveland ATF: FED-EX ONE FOUR NINE ROMEO, CLEVELAND
I assume line of sight range for VHF radio communications. As the aircraft travels towards Dulles airport, when could I expect the pilot to be in range of the Dulles ATC?
The pilot has a problem, not at the point where they would use the MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY call, but they would at least call PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN
I assume that is what they would use as that would be what a nautical person would use in a situation that is not at present life threatening, but could develop into one.
Thank you for your advice.