Defensive much? Last time a controller caused us to have an RA, he couldn't wait to get us off frequency. "Flagship, do a right 360 then on course to BUF", spin 'er around, and our TCAS starts indicating progressively worse (same altitude opposite direction, FL230). RA'd it down...
Just sayin', y'all aren't perfect either, but we are the ones that get snipped at for petty crap. We were following a Delta jet into DTW for the 27s, but for some reason, that wasn't good enough, we had to fly a right downwind and they had to fly a left downwind for 27L. Our downwind took us right into a thunderstorm, or it would have when we finally called "BS" and said we want the other downwind. Why'd they switch us?
Got a phone number from a controller who forgot they issued us an instruction. That was fun... Didn't go anywhere because they were wrong. But again, knee jerk, pilot screw up.
You guys have your ticket books and the automated tattle-tale crap. I'm not going to file reports every time controllers make mistakes. Such is life, the penalties only work one way.
I do have one funny one: going into some podunk airport, the tower controller cleared us to take off.... we all got a good laugh because we thought, and replied something to the affect of "uh, confirm cleared to land?"
More pilots need to know those emphasis areas. It drives me nuts listening to a guy have to read back his hold short 3 times because he kept leaving required bits out of the read back.In that same light what you don't see on the other end are the emphasis items we get hammered on. Pilot said "Miss the 737, cleared visual approach runway XX" Or maintain visual separation from the Boeing 737 N123 Alpha Pop He didn't say maintain visual separation (or include his technically correct call sign), that was a dangerous situation you placed that pilot in. People could have died! Died! Its exactly as bad as a near mid air in the minds of the powers that be.
...the aircraft supposedly took a frequency change from ZBW to another ZBW sector, but never checked in. Ended up flying through that whole sector, then my sector at ZNY, then off into non-Radar (WATRS airspace). We tried guard, ARINC, and sending other aircraft to the last known frequency (although the owner of that freq was not too happy about that). The aircraft finally checked in after flying in non-Radar oceanic for at least 100nm. I believe the destination was San Juan, and I don't remember where the flight originated.
I'll be honest, leaving radar without talking to the boundary radar sector is a pretty big deal...
As far as I know, that pilot did not receive a Brasher warning, and I think that is what has the OP concerned. I have never, in my short career, seen a pilot issued a Brasher for simply being NORDO.
Really like your quote at the bottom of your posts!Obviously you're worried or you wouldn't have posted this on the other website. I'd ask you to relax. You didn't blow a clearance, you endangered no one. Overshooting your destination by an hour is one thing, this happens every day. Seriously, this is a monthly thing. As a TRACON guy its stupid easy for forget so and so has checked in on an RNAV STAR (or not). Next thing you know you aren't talking to the plane on downwind. Uh, hey Center try that Falcon again. That's the end of it. Technically the aircraft was NORDO from 240 to low level, but its muddy waters as to who exactly is at fault. I won't start the shooting match if you wont (but believe me I was completely cognizant of where your aluminum tube was screaming in from and I was vectoring around you, be it VFR/IFR Falcon or otherwise).
We aren't out for blood.
The absolute best things pilots can do is visit a busy facility, especially during thunderstorm season. You will see what we do to get 2,500+ aircraft into/out of places like Atlanta and Chicago. You will see that we don't jerk pilots around, but action will be taken to separate a pilot who wants to go against the "plan" from other traffic (example: keeping you at a lower altitude so that pilots who are abiding by ATC instructions keep getting higher and going to center as safely and efficiently as possible. You will see we constantly get PIREPs (If the 717, 737, RJ, et cetera all said it was "light rain, light chop" it is light rain, light chop regardless of what your fancy weather display depicts otherwise they all wouldn't have flown through it!) You will see that system weather, in fusion, is a thousand times better at displaying all the weather (front, middle, and back of storms/cells) than your most advanced weather of an aircraft. We are here to provide a service for all aircraft, not just a single aircraft that thinks they have the best idea ever, when they depart, even though that don't know squat about what has been going on the last two hours a controller has been sitting there!
The absolute best things pilots can do is visit a busy facility, especially during thunderstorm season. You will see what we do to get 2,500+ aircraft into/out of places like Atlanta and Chicago. You will see that we don't jerk pilots around, but action will be taken to separate a pilot who wants to go against the "plan" from other traffic (example: keeping you at a lower altitude so that pilots who are abiding by ATC instructions keep getting higher and going to center as safely and efficiently as possible. You will see we constantly get PIREPs (If the 717, 737, RJ, et cetera all said it was "light rain, light chop" it is light rain, light chop regardless of what your fancy weather display depicts otherwise they all wouldn't have flown through it!) You will see that system weather, in fusion, is a thousand times better at displaying all the weather (front, middle, and back of storms/cells) than your most advanced weather of an aircraft. We are here to provide a service for all aircraft, not just a single aircraft that thinks they have the best idea ever, when they depart, even though that don't know squat about what has been going on the last two hours a controller has been sitting there!
If someone is three-four miles in front of you and there is someone three-four miles behind you and they all say "light rain, light chop," there is absolutely no way that your aircraft is affected that much differently in an eight mile gap. That would be some incredible weather cell to not affect the B717 in front of you, then affect you and only you, and finally not affect the CRJ2 that departed right behind you. You're talking about a cell that affects a specific flight, at a specific point and no one else around them for literally 30-45 seconds. If everyone goes through it and says the same they are either all lying, the weather is targeting you and only you, or your opinion of chop is different than everyone else!The guys in front of and behind delta 191 got through just fine, but that one unlucky airplane and everyone on board got to find out what happens when you say to yourself, "well, the last guy got in" and don't perform your own weather avoidance.
Also, your radar doesn't show the tops of a lot of build ups, I've found. And I'm here to tell you, I'm not punching through a build up at FL350 just because you guys can't see it.
If someone is three-four miles in front of you and there is someone three-four miles behind you and they all say "light rain, light chop," there is absolutely no way that your aircraft is affected that much differently in an eight mile gap. That would be some incredible weather cell to not affect the B717 in front of you, then affect you and only you, and finally not affect the CRJ2 that departed right behind you. You're talking about a cell that affects a specific flight, at a specific point and no one else around them for literally 30-45 seconds. If everyone goes through it and says the same they are either all lying, the weather is targeting you and only you, or your opinion of chop is different than everyone else!
Have you ever had a chance to ride up front during thunderstorm season? If you haven't, you should, it'd likely be an eye opener for you.
As for me it would be I'm sure and I plan to. Nobody is equipped with perfect WX radar. Lesson on ATC WX radar for anyone interested. Ours has full picture with no altitudes and weak penetration. On board radar is powerful and can scale altitude if used properly, but its a narrow beam. I've had days where everyone is balking about something my radar doesn't depict. Those days I ask exactly where it is and what it's extent is. Other days the glowing red of death is light chop. My and your best bet are PIREPS. Launching under the assumption that you'll be in the flight levels in 10 minutes is absolutely the worst thing you can do though.
That's where I get the most grief. That same departure hole you're banking on is an arrival's way in. I can give you deviations all over the place, but it won't be conducive to normal ops to you so don't anticipate a continued climb. .
Also, with regard to deviations around build ups that you guys can't see, we normally get the same picture you do on our radar.
This thread has taken a turn toward helpful information exchange, which is nice.
With regard to deviations, I'll give you whatever you need without much question no matter what I'm depicting, but I don't agree that onboard radar shows the same as ATC mosaic. Onboard does not penetrate very far into the precip as radar naturally attenuates quickly. The advantage of ATC mosaic is we can see how far along the route the precip extends, but we only have a picture of the bottom of all the weather. Onboard's advantage is you can tilt up and down a bit to find better altitudes, though you can't see very far into it. This was probably contributory to AFR447.
There's a big difference between a "Oh, actually our callsign is..." tone and a "DAMN IT! YOU'RE WRONG AND I'VE STILL GOT URINE COVERED CORNFLAKES IN MY TEETH, OUR CALLSIGN IS..." tone. Most guys talk in the first tone, but it's more than a few who jump right into the second any chance they get. I don't take it personal because then I'll hear them do it with on Ground then Tower if they get the chance too. I personally usually only see controllers get snippy with "that guy" and not the guys who politely correct them. But hey, bad apples on both sides.I love it when a controller gets my callsign wrong then gets snippy when I attempt to clarify.
Be polite, admit your mistakes(when you need to), and doesn't hurt to say thank you on either end of the mic.