Kingairer
'Tiger Team' Member
This came to mind.
Both the original post and this one have one thing in common. Its the list snip by the pilot "just needed a little help", or "playing games".
This came to mind.
I would have mentioned that it's his job to service me.
not in that way
Anyway, who cares? This "fair share" stuff is for politicians and airline managers. I just fly the jet and collect paychecks.
This came to mind.
So you wouldn't slow sooner and have 40 knots plus less than the other guys to turn off 4-5000 feet down the runway versus rolling to the end to save a few minutes? I just always figured that was the reason they slow so much.I don't think it has anything to do with where you exit the runway. Approach speeds are based on aircraft weight. So what you calculate is what you fly. Everything else comes down to braking.
No. We all fly similar approach speeds once configured. Like @Screaming_Emu said, it's weight dependent. Company culture or "Screw this, I'm tired, flaps 5" is probably the reason.So you wouldn't slow sooner and have 40 knots plus less than the other guys to turn off 4-5000 feet down the runway versus rolling to the end to save a few minutes? I just always figured that was the reason they slow so much.
So you wouldn't slow sooner and have 40 knots plus less than the other guys to turn off 4-5000 feet down the runway versus rolling to the end to save a few minutes? I just always figured that was the reason they slow so much.
"I'm tired. Base leg? Slow that beezy down. Flaps one five, speed 140!"No. We all fly similar approach speeds once configured. Like @Screaming_Emu said, it's weight dependent. Company culture or "Screw this, I'm tired, flaps 5" is probably the reason.![]()
A few months ago a plane behind me said "thanks for the strobes" as I lined up on runway 13 at LGA at night in low IFR rainy conditions. We've got fog, water breaking on the rocks that make up the edge of the runway, it's dark out, people's windows have glare and water all over them, and as usual the field is in it's perpetual intersecting ops configuration. If my book says to turn on the strobes on takeoff, they're going on -- look right at them if you want, just like you can stare right at the sun on a nice day. If that "thanks for the strobes" blocked a tower transmission that was something important, like stopping an impending incursion etc., I really would not want to attempt to defend the need to say that to the plane taking the runway.
Not to completely derail the thread but your ops manual doesn't give pilot's discretion when visibility is crap and the strobes are more disorienting than helpful?
No discretion.
Do you think they should stay off when departing through an intersecting runway in the dark in low IFR?
Someone is gonna break out with about 15 seconds 'til touchdown on 22 with someone rolling through departing 13, I think it's nice to clearly see that airplane if you are the one on final.
The one taxiing in line for takeoff can look away, or look down at their panties, which are all bunched up.
That's weird that you guys don't get discretion, not knocking you for it or anything. Busy intersecting runways can be a tough one, cause if they come on and the guy behind you gets caught off guard, you knock out his night vision or worse, which creates a hazard, but if you leave them off, the guy approaching the intersecting runway doesn't get to see the traffic they just heard get a takeoff clearance, which also creates a hazard. Anyway,
/derailment.
Just to be the difficult devil's advocate: Forget the ops manual, Part 91 gives you that discretion.Not to completely derail the thread but your ops manual doesn't give pilot's discretion when visibility is crap and the strobes are more disorienting than helpful?
Then follow the proper channels. If a pilot chastises a controller over the frequency, you had better believe he is going to get a number. We are expected to act in a professional manner. Ranting like a 5 year old because someone asked for a heading is not going to earn you a gold star next to your name. Reminds me of Todd at LGB. When a controller is known by name, maybe it's the controller who is the problem. There are a few guys who work SoCal tracon who are this way. If you're not 121, they treat you like a red headed step child. For the most part, they are all very accomidating. But there are a few...