tbstanto
Well-Known Member
I was flying today and talking with the good folks at XXXXX Center. An airplane was assigned to FL220, and center contacted them and asked them to check their altimeter's barometric pressure setting, as they appeared to be 300' too high. As expected, they had forgotten to set their altimeter to 29.92. No harm, no one yelled or screamed or anything, someone was just a little embarrassed.
A few minutes later, XXXXX Center came back on and asked the offending aircraft if they had a minute, as they had a question that they did not know the answer to. "What pressure setting would you use if assigned a block altitude from 17,000' to 18,000' ?" Evidently they asked everyone in the Center, including their supervisors, and no one knew.
Several people responded on the frequency, and no one knew for sure what the correct answer was. The best guess is that they should use local pressure below 17,999 and change it to 29.92 once crossing 18,000'. By that point, however, the airplane would no longer be at 18,000' indicated.
Any thoughts on this? Personally, I think that I would ask Center what pressure they wanted me to use. As long as we are both on the same page, that seems like the best solution to me.
A few minutes later, XXXXX Center came back on and asked the offending aircraft if they had a minute, as they had a question that they did not know the answer to. "What pressure setting would you use if assigned a block altitude from 17,000' to 18,000' ?" Evidently they asked everyone in the Center, including their supervisors, and no one knew.
Several people responded on the frequency, and no one knew for sure what the correct answer was. The best guess is that they should use local pressure below 17,999 and change it to 29.92 once crossing 18,000'. By that point, however, the airplane would no longer be at 18,000' indicated.
Any thoughts on this? Personally, I think that I would ask Center what pressure they wanted me to use. As long as we are both on the same page, that seems like the best solution to me.