Screaming_Eagle_ATC
Well-Known Member
close enough.... it can be anyway at the right time on the freeway. Road trip to Manhattan beach anyone?Well, I got some bad news for you on the location anyway: Here it is!
close enough.... it can be anyway at the right time on the freeway. Road trip to Manhattan beach anyone?Well, I got some bad news for you on the location anyway: Here it is!
Well, I got some bad news for you on the location anyway: Here it is!
ZLA is awesome. They have to deal with me.I would LOVE! ZLA that is one hell of a center from what I hear.... especially when you think about how many different chuncks of that airspace used to be their own seperate facilities. Is the facility actually in LA? I've spent some time in and around the city and love it. West hollywood however, seems like another planet sometimes. I digress.
We do!... how much longer do you think you have before you become fully certified?
Haha he thought he was moving to Hollywood!
How ghetto is East Palmdale these days? I've never visited, and my only frame of reference is the Afroman song (NSFW: Naughty language).
Do most ZLA controllers live in the Palmdale area, or commute from places like Santa Clarita?
It depends on local agreements, we have automatic control on handoff with all inter units and one exterior unit.Screaming_Eagle_ATC
A hand-off does not imply control. Even once an aircraft is handed off and communications switched, the aircraft is not your control for headings or altitude changes (edit: or anything else for that matter) until it is 3 miles inside the boundary of your airspace, unless you call up the adjacent sector and specifically request control.
Where are you headed?
I have to do the research (which I am currently looking for), but I believe the logic of splitting the sectors at F230/F240 has to do with the transition between Mach Number and Indicated Airspeed. Perhaps an airline pilot could answer where that transition occurs, because I am not sure.
Edit: A quick google search reveals that the transition occurs differently by type, but that a typical altitude for transition from IAS to Mach would be F245 and a transition back to indicated would occur at F235
It depends on local agreements, we have automatic control on handoff with all inter units and one exterior unit.
The majority of planes climb on a speed schedule, so 300/.80 would mean that we maintain 300KIAS until that speed corresponds to M.80. We maintain .80 until cruise altitude. The opposite is true for the descent. .80/300 on the way down.
The exact altitude at which the changeover happens doesn't depend on the type as much as the conditions. Everybody on a 300/.80 schedule will changeover at the same altitude under the same atmospheric conditions. In general, the smaller planes will have slower speed schedules than larger planes.
It depends on local agreements, we have automatic control on handoff with all inter units and one exterior unit.
The section you referenced has to do with altitude filters on our radar scope. As far as stratification of sectors is concerned, in my facility a low altitude sector is the floor of Class E to F230, or in some cases that altitude above what is delegated to the approach control (usually sfc to 10,000), high altitude is F240-F600, or in the instances of ultra-high sectors, which would own F320 and above I believe. Obviously, an approach controller does not need to see traffic at F280, so those targets are filtered from their scope. That is what 5-14-5 is concerned with. Standard altitude filters for a sector are determined by SOP.
I have to do the research (which I am currently looking for), but I believe the logic of splitting the sectors at F230/F240 has to do with the transition between Mach Number and Indicated Airspeed. Perhaps an airline pilot could answer where that transition occurs, because I am not sure.
Edit: A quick google search reveals that the transition occurs differently by type, but that a typical altitude for transition from IAS to Mach would be F245 and a transition back to indicated would occur at F235
Someone please correct me if I am wrong, because now I am curious.
Just out of curiosity, what type is that? Typical cruise seems to be m.78 to m.82, with a few slower and a few faster. Seems to correspond more by carrier than type.
I didn't really have a particular type in mind, but that 300/.80 profile could be something around the size of a 757/767 or A310/A300. In general, smaller would be slower, and bigger would be faster, but not by much. In an A320, you may see something like 280/.78, while a 777 may be 330/.82
Indeed the speeds would depend more on the carrier than by the type. The carrier will have the pilot enter a cost index in the FMC. This is the big factor that determines the speeds. So if DAL and AAL operate the same planes, and DAL tends to use a higher cost index, DAL planes will tend to fly faster than AAL planes.
There's been a big switch in years past to slower speeds for fuel savings.
767s operating at .78/.79 as an example
The fact they manage to attain RVSM airspace is a feat in my opinion.Dont forget crj2's running at .60-.63. Oh wait thats all they can do...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk 2
Dont forget crj2's running at .60-.63. Oh wait thats all they can do...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk 2
That would be because it's not a regional jet.only regional jets I see are the occasional JBU E190 and they have decent performance.![]()
That would be because it's not a regional jet.
The ERJ climbs out at 250 to 10,000, then 290 to Mach .65. I personally would rather take a vector than a speed adjustment in the climb, so if you have a choice, give me a steer instead of slowing me down.