SpiceWeasel
Tre Kronor
I cancel once on the ground IFR (I have NEVER waited until getting to the gate), and VFR as soon as possible in compliance with the FOM.
Here's a twist-
Land at night after the tower is closed at KMHK and you might not be able to get a transmission out to Kansas City Center - the reception is bad. I think we had to relay through somebody else last time. Short taxi so we were parked before we had it done.
What then?
Operate as PIC for your aircraft how you see fit and I'll operate mine how I see fit. Will I go out of the way to help other aviators in the air? Absolutely, as long as I don't feel it will jeopardize the safety of my aircraft. Will I cancel IFR if the conditions are CAVU? Yes. Will I hold on to my IFR Clearance until I'm chalked on the ramp if the conditions are bad enough? Yes. What's safe for you may not be for me.
Here's a twist-
Land at night after the tower is closed at KMHK and you might not be able to get a transmission out to Kansas City Center - the reception is bad. I think we had to relay through somebody else last time. Short taxi so we were parked before we had it done.
What then?
Here's a twist-
Land at night after the tower is closed at KMHK and you might not be able to get a transmission out to Kansas City Center - the reception is bad. I think we had to relay through somebody else last time. Short taxi so we were parked before we had it done.
What then?
Not at all reasonable I say. You should have taken back off and canceled. You are screwing us all!
that's reasonable...but if you know someone else is waiting for the approach clearance, you can relay back through them...I recall doing that for someone.
Operate as PIC for your aircraft how you see fit and I'll operate mine how I see fit. Will I go out of the way to help other aviators in the air? Absolutely, as long as I don't feel it will jeopardize the safety of my aircraft. Will I cancel IFR if the conditions are CAVU? Yes. Will I hold on to my IFR Clearance until I'm chalked on the ramp if the conditions are bad enough? Yes. What's safe for you may not be for me.
It's not a matter of me going out of my way to screw my fellow aviator but I wouldn't feel any guilt for the guy behind me. If you can't You need to wait another 5 minutes up in the air? Deal w/ it.because of icing then declare an emergency and do what you need to do. Otherwise relax and enjoy the scenic tour of the 270 Radial yet again.
Make your own decisions and operate the aircraft however you feel comfortable operating it. This whole your a bad pilot because you can't talk and taxi game is getting old.
Here's my take, take it for what its worth.
We all have to co-exist out there. GA/ 14 CFR 91 as well as Air Carrier/ 14 CFR 121. The 121 guy is the one with the more restrictive set of regulations, both federal as well as company.
To me, IF the following conditions are met, then an air carrier flight could potentially cancel IFR once safely on the deck at their destination, or at a time determined by the Capt to be safe to cancel:
A. Do the Opspecs allow it?
if so, then,
B. Are the prevailing conditions (flight/ground/wx) safe enough to allow it?
If the above are met with a Yes, then I don't see why a Capt couldn't make his own determination to cancel his IFR if he knows he may be delaying departures/arrivals due to it. He wouldn't have to or be forced to, mind you; however if being a good neighbor with other air carrier, or in this case GA, is covered by A & B above, then why not do it? Again, it's the Capt's call.
This all said, the inverse is true too. A GA aircraft inbound in similar conditions, while not bound by an OpsSpecs (talking the average GA plane and operation here), if the pilot feels conditions allow him to cancel his clearance at some point prior to landing, or after landing, then it'd be common courtesy to thy neighbor to do so, whether said neighbor is an air carrier waiting to shoot an approach, or another GA. The PIC, just like the aforementioned air carrier pilot, doesn't have to, but the same courtesy applies.
BL is, we all have to co-exist.
This below.
Post 31 on Page 2.
Enough said.
Man, you guys like to go round and round over nothing......
You can't use your own argument to prove your own argument.![]()
What was the holding fix there? Was it KNEES?
It seemed that we always did Captain Monitored Approaches at ACV...have the poor FO fly all the way down to 1800RVR only to have the Captain bounce the landing and blame the FO.
I love 91 flying.
-Pick up the outbound IFR when you're 20 miles from the airport
-Shoot an approach to minimums
-Land and cancel IFR on the roll out.
-Set takeoff flaps instead of flaps up on the taxi in so you save a little wear and tear on the flap motor
-Three minute quick turn; go inside, grab the passenger, throw the person and bags in the airplane
-Call for release while you're running the checklist on the taxi out
-Airborne again 5 minutes after you landed.
All the while, the line guy is still standing on the ramp trying to figure out WTF is going on.
what with cmill throwing his little punches at 121 guys and Mark talking about keeping an IFR clearance to the gate because he might slide off a taxiway and burst into flames (oh come on), this thread has irritated me. I was a 121 captain and we took pride in making the system work for all of us (pilots). Going into those remote airports out there, we were on our own and it was critical that we helped each other...and.... just because mr Alaska bush pilot hasn't had his ass handed to him yet, he certainly has the right attitude for it....hopefully he'll survive it.
I am no big wig pilot...I can fly, but I am still an adolescent pilot. I have a lot to learn, so does Seggy and so does cmill... lets not even get into some of the flight instructors who really have no idea what they're talking about here, so lets stop smacking each other around OK?
just a little hangar talk kiddos...
how do you cancel your IFR clearance without a radio...you don't so that's understandable.:insane:And, for the record, if any of the airplanes I had mastered had electrical systems, instruments, or radios, I would have cancelled IFR with the airport in sight.