wrxpilot
New Member
3. Saying N12345 turning finals (what the #### is finals its final not plural).
I just heard a guy doing that for the first time a couple of days ago... I thought it was pretty odd myself!
3. Saying N12345 turning finals (what the #### is finals its final not plural).
Keeping your hand on the throttle during cruise flight would be an example of a horrible habit for students. How many airline pilots do that?
Thought of a new one today...
The student who likes to ident a NAV before checking the volume....
Thought of a new one today...
The student who likes to ident a NAV before checking the volume....
OMFG!!! On the money! Very boring!students with no personality....boooring
Holy hell!! I need to meet you. We'd get along just great. I totally agree with you!Patterns that are not square, this drives me insane, is that difficult to look outside and see where the wind is pushing you? Which leads me too....
Students/pilots who fly the airplane in the pattern by numbers (ie. I need to be at this altitude by this point, this decent rate by this point, this heading to fly downwind), LOOK AT THE RUNWAY, WHERE ARE YOU LANDING?!!!!!!!F&#K me that irks me beyond belief!!!!! Honestly, think of it for a min, just look at the runway, it has ALL the information you need, all pilots need is an airspeed indicator, even that isn't all that important if you listen and feel what the plane is doing, geez. This is all usually preceded by....
Student/pilots who feel the need to tell everyone their life story on the radio (Merced traffic, Cessna 69FU 182/G outbound on the ILS RUNWAY 30, procedure turn outbound past COOPZ intersection, full stop with the AWOS information, at 1300 feet desending to to traffic pattern altitude, looking for traffic on the downwind and we have the departing traffic in sight, Merced) GOOD GOD MAN YGBSM!!? What's next, your prognoisis of your gout over the radio? Care to share how that lanced cyst turn out for ya? Let's stop the verbal diarrea on the radios, shall we? The same guy usually ends up on approach like this....
If I hear tallyho on the radio once more, I'm going to puke, god who says that? Traffic in sight? TALLYHO!!!?!!! Your a dork who watches too much Top Gun and more then likey wears tight jean to show off your fupa. Maverick, time to grow up and say something intelligent, such as looking or insight, or, if you must, traffic insight. These same people are sometimes these....
When walking into a nice fbo, usually younger guys who rape/pilliage/abuse the free coffee/goodies there. Look jackals, your 8.3 gallon top off of 100LL prob wasn't in mind when managment put those out, take a cup and a cookie and be normal.
Whoa....I'm not sure what high performace aircraft you instruct in, but if you're teaching in what I'm teaching (which most instructors are, i.e. Piper or Cessna trainers) I'll have to COMPLETELY disagree with you.Here's what happens when you sit there and hold on to the throttle. A student learning to fly will constantly adjust the power. When you get 100 feet high or low you should not adjust the power, you should adjust the pitch and trim. When I fly with a throttle holder I sit there and watch the RPM fluxuate. Most of them dont even know they're doing it.
Don't touch the yoke except for lateral movements.
-Pilots (not just students, because there are MANY pilots who don't know proper phraseology)
-Pilots who read back IFR ATC clearances verbatim.
e.g. ATC: "------ You are five miles from the final approach fix, turn right heading 020, maintain 3000 until established on the localizer, cleared ILS 6 approach"
COOLDUDEPILOT: "Five miles from final approach, turn right heading 020....ugh....maintain 3000 until established on the loca...ugh..lizer...ugh............cleared ILS approach"
Realistically, all ATC needs to hear is, "right 020, 3000, cleared ILS 6."
Cuts time on the frequency, ATC will appreciate it, you will get better service for knowing what the hell you are doing, and you will not sound like a dumb student.
From my experience, ATC can be busy as hell, but you bet you'll get priority with practice requests if you know how to talk on the radios. Think before you talk on the radios and be secure.
Where would the confusion be in that case?Saying "right 020, 3000, cleared ILS 6" is too abbreviated and can cause confusion. I'm not a big fan of reading back a clearance word for word, but there is a middle ground.
It's better to get it right 100% of the time than to be fast, but cause confusion occasionally.
Definitely true. I guess I was incorrectly assuming students training in a typical Cessna 152/172 or Piper Warrior/Arrow.Using the just the throttle to keep the plane level and trimmed is a good way to stay stabilized in certain airplanes - Although I've flown airplanes that don't drop their nose when power is reduced, instead they keep altitude, and lose airspeed.
Where would the confusion be in that case?You're only being vectored to intercept the final approach course. I'm all for learning, please explain where the confusion may be.
I'm already telling the controller in which direction the turn should be initiated, that's one of the important parts. I mention the altitude to keep, and I read back my clearance to fly the X-approach.
Thanks for the reply, I understand what you're trying to get at.In your specific example, it's probably clear enough, but you could still get in trouble depending on how you say it.
Let's suppose you got distracted by something in the cockpit and hesitated a little during your readback. You might say, "Right zero two........zero...three thousand, cleared ILS six approach."
Ok, you just read everything back correctly (all the numbers are there, at least) but the controller might interpret your hesitation as confusion over what you're supposed to do. It could have been heard as an incomplete heading ("Right zero to...what heading did he say?") and an impossible altitude ("Zero three thousand.")
Maybe this wouldn't confuse the controller enough to query you, but it might make him pause and think about it long enough to waste the time you saved by cutting out a few words.
And there are many other cases where it could cause more confusion. I just consider it a bad habit (and nonstandard phraseology) to only readback numbers without putting in "break" words to identify what you're reading back.
Incorporating words like "heading," "maintain," "descend," "climbing," "leaving," "squawk," etc. cue the listeners in to what you're about to say. Otherwise it just becomes a jumble of numbers.
For instance, when reading back an initial IFR clearance (CRAFT), many pilots will get something like this. Read everything out loud:
C -- Cessna 12345, Cleared to the Springfield Municiple airport
R -- As filed
A -- Maintain 5000, expect 8,000 ten minutes after departure
F -- Departure frequency 124.8
T -- Squawk 1234
And they'll read it back like this:
"Cleared to Springfield as filed, five thousand then eight after ten, one two four point eight, one two three four, three four five."
When they should say something more like:
"Cleared to Springfield as filed, maintain five thousand, expect eight thousand one zero minutes after departure, frequency is one two four point eight, squawk one two three four, Cessna three four five."
That might be a bit of an extreme example, but hopefully it illustrates my point. Numbers have a tendency to "run together" unless key words are dropped into place.
So it's not a huge deal, but it's something to consider, especially when we as instructors need to model good phraseology to our students. Controllers are held to an extremely high standards for phraseology when training to be a controller, and I wished more pilots were held to similar standards when it comes to communications.
When I read back my clearances, (e.g. Right 0-2-0, Three Thousand, Cleared ILS 6) I like keeping the number clusters together. If I'm distracted at all in the cockpit, I'll immediately ask ATC to "say again, please." I tell my students they should never be guessing what ATC told them to do. They should use "verify -----------, please." I really really really avoid doing the whole "ugh....0-2-...ugh..." I'll just quickly ask them to repeat it again so I don't have to play the whole, "ugh....ugh..." game.![]()
I don't teach my students to read back clearances the way I do. They do a good job for the most part.
I have yet to have any problems with ATC, but am not saying I won't in the future, so I definitely appreciate the feedback.
Ok, I'll add another pet peeve:
-Students who read back with their callsign first. (e.g. "Piper ----- turn right heading 090; instead, "Turn right heading 090, Piper ----")
It's as if they were ATC giving themselves instructions.![]()