Here is the short version:
My student was a 45 hour pilot, who happens to be my 17 year-old son.
We took off from St. George, Utah enroute to Henderson, Nevada, which lies in Class B airspace. We got flight following from LA Center who handed us off to LAS approach. Approach immediately gave us a 60 degree left turn and proceeded to give us the ultimate run-around. We played the game with them, hoping I could get some Class B experience for my son. Nope, nada, none. In fact they never "cleared us into class bravo" but cleared us direct to the airport after a 25 minute vector. He terminated radar service, gave us a 1200 code and pointed us right at the Class B with no clearance into it. We were only 2 miles from the Class B airspace at the last hard altitude he assigned when he cut us loose. We did the high dive and with a steep turn, avoided the class B and scooted into Henderson from the South.
Since I am pretty new into this GA flight instruction, I would like to know if this is a common way of being treated in a light airplane? This was WAY more difficult than flying a CAT III approach into O'Hare in a jet! I don't know how they can expect a 100 hour private pilot to do this. Unless I am missing the big picture, this was a real setup to get a violation!
Any thoughts from you guys/gals that do this all the time?
Chris
My student was a 45 hour pilot, who happens to be my 17 year-old son.
We took off from St. George, Utah enroute to Henderson, Nevada, which lies in Class B airspace. We got flight following from LA Center who handed us off to LAS approach. Approach immediately gave us a 60 degree left turn and proceeded to give us the ultimate run-around. We played the game with them, hoping I could get some Class B experience for my son. Nope, nada, none. In fact they never "cleared us into class bravo" but cleared us direct to the airport after a 25 minute vector. He terminated radar service, gave us a 1200 code and pointed us right at the Class B with no clearance into it. We were only 2 miles from the Class B airspace at the last hard altitude he assigned when he cut us loose. We did the high dive and with a steep turn, avoided the class B and scooted into Henderson from the South.
Since I am pretty new into this GA flight instruction, I would like to know if this is a common way of being treated in a light airplane? This was WAY more difficult than flying a CAT III approach into O'Hare in a jet! I don't know how they can expect a 100 hour private pilot to do this. Unless I am missing the big picture, this was a real setup to get a violation!
Any thoughts from you guys/gals that do this all the time?
Chris