Was it a truboprop? I flew mine at 250 until 6-7 out unless told to do otherwise. It was annoying to be told to slow to some airspeed and then get vectored all over the place to get behind a jet doing 80-100kts less.Thanks for the quick reply. I was just wondering because I had a pilot get pissy earlier about being reduced to his final approach speed 8-10 miles from the airport. It was either run them tight 2.5 where they would see each other or start going out for 22-25 mile ILS PRMs...
I'd say that depends on the company's SOP.For the jet pilots or turboprop pilots can chip in too, when is the absolute last time to change any configuration?
Thanks for the quick reply. I was just wondering because I had a pilot get pissy earlier about being reduced to his final approach speed 8-10 miles from the airport. It was either run them tight 2.5 where they would see each other or start going out for 22-25 mile ILS PRMs...
For the jet pilots or turboprop pilots can chip in too, when is the absolute last time to change any configuration?
For the jet pilots or turboprop pilots can chip in too, when is the absolute last time to change any configuration?
No it was a MD88Was it a truboprop? I flew mine at 250 until 6-7 out unless told to do otherwise. It was annoying to be told to slow to some airspeed and then get vectored all over the place to get behind a jet doing 80-100kts less.
I don't know how we stayed on visuals all day today. Guys were breaking out at 4,500-4,700 feet and we were working our backsides off to turn 10-12 mile finals while insuring vertical and lateral separation with other aircraft instead of going out for triple ILS PRMs. I was just shocked to hear that pissy pilot when I'm busting my rear to save them 10+ minutes of flying time to the airport.Most jet profiles tend to be built to be fully configured at the marker. However, as you know in IMC, stable at 1000' which is about 3 miles from the threshold.
Those pilots could have been grumpy about something trivial (it's going to add 1 minute to their arrival) or something operational (such as not wanting to expose great and more flap surface and wing in icing). Either way, there are better ways to communicate it...
What would be your ideal speed to maintain to the marker and what aircraft do you fly?I'll happily slow down whenever you'd like. Realize the pissy pilot is going to be part of that 10% rule we all just put up with. Feel free to offer that you'll need to take them around if they exceed 150K. I'd imagine that would do the trick. What bothers me is the 180 to the marker.
Thanks for the quick reply. I was just wondering because I had a pilot get pissy earlier about being reduced to his final approach speed 8-10 miles from the airport. It was either run them tight 2.5 where they would see each other or start going out for 22-25 mile ILS PRMs...
The above verbiage is used all the time especially on monitor. It is plain language that gets the point across. Do you think it should have been "reduce to slowest practical speed?"What verbiage was used to affect this speed reduction? If it was something like "reduce to final approach speed" then I could understand the pilot's disagreement, since that is not a proper instruction.
What would be your ideal speed to maintain to the marker and what aircraft do you fly?