I use it if I'm not on an IFR flight plan, but I feel like I have a good grasp of what it is meant to be.
And that's good. It's an available service. And like you say, it comes with limitations and terms, which you understand. Using the service is purely technique.....neither right nor wrong to do so.
For me, I see far more value for using it while enroute with ARTCC, as they're not usually slammed busy, and if you have anything go wrong, you're already talking with ATC. Whereas try requesting it at peak time with PHX, when you're only planning on going underneath their airspace shelf, or around it, but never inside it, and its a fair chance you'll get an annoyed "unable at this time. Remain clear of Class B airspace, frequency change approved." Conversely, In and around other TRACONs, it may be the opposite at various times. It all just depends.
Like stated, it's an available service, but one that is lowest priority for ATC. Your mileage may vary.
We used it all the time while mapping cuz you know, we're in ur finals mowin ur skies
I don't bother with it, for the reasons I've cited, when it comes to a terminal area or near one (unless required), but enroute with ARTCC? Sure, I can see more value there.
Know when my closest near-midair was? When under VFR flight following with a busy TRACON at a peak time, and outside their airspace. No traffic callout for another VFR aircraft. When queried, the busy controller said he didn't see the traffic on his scope and was busy with the IFRs he was working (which he was, you could definitely tell), and he's absolutely right. I was lowest priority for him, as per the terms of service for VFR flight following. So no, I don't bother with it in a busy terminal area, nor when it isn't feasible. But I do monitor the appropriate freqs and keep the head on a swivel.
Some people like it, great. Others, it's a false sense of security depending on when its being utilized. Heck, much of the time I'm too low for enroute following anyway.
Flight following has the following tangible benefits for me:
- Immediate contact with someone on the ground if something goes sideways.
- A source of emergency contact if SAR dispatch is required.
- A potential resource that I can use if I need information, weather advisories, or a helpful vector if I pull a stupid.
- VFR traffic advisories on a workload-permitting basis. (You don't just stop watching for traffic because you're receiving traffic advisories, right?)
- Positive separation from IFR traffic.
- An increased probability of a friendly "Hey bud, where are you going?" in my ear if I pull a stupid and am about to fly through airspace I shouldn't.
- Potential awareness of pop-up TFRs such as law-enforcement TFRs, and
- A degree of traffic separation in active MOAs, if I'm talking with the controlling agency.
None of this is a solid guarantee, of course, but it's a really nice toolkit to have in your back pocket. Plus, ATC knows who you are, where you are, and has a verified altitude on you ... so they don't have to worry as much about that unverified target plodding across the departure corridor.
I dunno. I'll sure take it if I can get it!
-Fox
I like it for the additional SA it provides. Do I stake my life on it and go heads down in VMC? Absolutely not. However, my flying is limited to GA stuff, mostly in a training situation, so it's a different thing than most of you guys in fancy turbine powered flying machines.
FWIW I've never been denied a VFR transition across NY and they've always been accommodating even during busy periods. Sure they'll vector me a little but they'll get me on course relatively quick. The NY guys are always helpful and professional.
And that's cool. Like I said, I can see all those things for flight following from an ARTCC. Really good stuff to have, and most ARTCCs aren't insanely busy. Maybe even a lower workload TRACON, but using under or around many terminal areas are the only places I really don't use it for the mentioned reasons.
Don't get me wrong, it's a service and is beneficial in certain times/places, for the reasons you cite. Agree.
I'm mostly with you, but ... not to belabor the point, but frankly, most of my time with flight following has been with approach, rather than center, and much of it has been within 300nm of my home airport. I have a feeling that you must deal with a particularly busy or difficult set of controllers in the PHX area... I haven't flown much there.
Elsewhere controllers seem happy to have you identified as long as you're not a toolbag.
-Fox
I almost always request it in the Bay Area. Thus far, I have only been denied once, though technically I asked for it and ATC was busy never got back to me in a span of a few minutes so I just didn't call back. You know, rather than throwing a tantrum with NorCal.Who actually wastes their time with VFR flight following? Being as low priority as it is, and the fact it doesn't really buy me anything, I don't ever bother with it.
I mean, at PAO for example, the contract CFIs usually ask for about $80/hr so...I think the full time guys clear that 35k/year ceiling by a wide margin. No shortage of people with more money than they know what to do with and a lot of free time out here.You can actually get a degree in that. I can't imagine spending $150k on a $35k/yr (at best) career.
It's also all about how you ask on the radio for flight following. If you sound like a rookie on the radio and you congest the frequency and block other people they'll deny you sometimes. A guy before me did this and he was denied. When I keyed up, I was concise and to the point and I was given flight following.Agreed that the biggest deal is not being a tool and being the least amount of pain in the butt (workload) to the controller as possible; being directly related to the quality/quantity of service received from ATC in the flight following regard.
I avail myself of it when I'm flying survey. I have 2 ipads and a laptop to mange (along with both cameras). Being fully aware the burden is on me to provide my own separation, we have routes then come up next to and inside of C and B airspaces. Even If I'm not inside the Charlie, I figure it's only neighborly for me to let them to know what the target squawking 1200 is doing 15 SW of the primary field at 5,500 MSL. It's cheap insurance for re-positioning flights as well. If they can get me, great, if not, no biggie.Who actually wastes their time with VFR flight following? Being as low priority as it is, and the fact it doesn't really buy me anything, I don't ever bother with it.
Who actually wastes their time with VFR flight following? Being as low priority as it is, and the fact it doesn't really buy me anything, I don't ever bother with it.
*ahem* Las Vegas *ahem*Flight following through a bravo is much easier to accommodate if you call the sector not working the final for your initial radar id etc. if you're already tagged up with all the info and on course, even if super busy I can take you no prob. I'll deny it though if I'm your initial call because getting all the info, typing it in, giving you a squawk etc just takes too much time. I know there are some places that seem to just deny all class b clearances, although here in NY we try to be as accommodating as we can.