n77j
Well-Known Member
Better call SLC.
I turned down a sidestep request inside the marker and got a "Is there a reason you wouldn't accept the sidestep?" on ground.
You know why they asked you that...because SWA does it...

Better call SLC.
I turned down a sidestep request inside the marker and got a "Is there a reason you wouldn't accept the sidestep?" on ground.
Was it a sidestep request from 17/35 to 16L/34R or was it a request from one of the 34/16s to the other?Better call SLC.
I turned down a sidestep request inside the marker and got a "Is there a reason you wouldn't accept the sidestep?" on ground.
I would ask him to quote my airlines stabilized approach criteria. If he can't tell him to look it up and get back to me....
Was it a sidestep request from 17/35 to 16L/34R or was it a request from one of the 34/16s to the other?
Not judging your choice not to (not that you'd care if I did), but that would be pretty ballsy of them to question a sidestep from one 16/34 to the other, when the terminal is right in the friggin' middle of them! And that's a rather sizeable sidestep to boot, especially inside the marker.
I just find it funny. They questioned your decision not to when they're the ones giving taxi instructions just as the reversers crack, have you slow to final approach speed at 11,000 ft when you're still 5 miles from the departure end of the runways AND you're the only plane on approach, etc. Good ole SLC.
99.9% of the time, when approach says the runway on the initial call, I'm going to land on that one. Unless they give an advanced warning with ample amounts of time to redo the box and dial the new freq. @Seggy had something about this a while ago about the incident rate skyrocketing when you're given a different runway than briefed. Or something to that effect.
One day, when the straw on my back breaks, or I get a wild bug in my ass, I'm just going to let them know the truth.It was LDA/DME 35, inside the marker and then a request to land 34R.
We talked about the high probability of an untimely runway change, my first officer elected not to accept on based upon both our history of two to four runway changes in a short period of time and when it came inside the marker, NOPE.
I've been jacked around, he had been jacked around, he was new and I'm not going to put my first officer in a situation against what we already briefed, out of his comfort zone, all for the convenience of ATC and pilot lounge bravado.
This was our third runway change. Got set up for 34R as directed, then a change to 35. Then approach said "landing south! Set up for 16R. Whoops I mean 35". Then a sidestep to 34R when they asked if we had the field in sight.
Nope! Nope! Nope! Too much too quickly and for what? We were one of three airplanes, from our perspective, on arrival.
I was amazed at the amount of impact rubber on taxiway T when I was there last. It is not as rare as one might think. Also people do the same at HND but there are quite a few less skilled aviators at that airport.
I think the problem is that they're only doing that because a lot of other pilots in that size of aircraft have gleefully accepted it.
In the era of a continuous datastream uplink and FOQA datamining coupled with a heavy emphasis on stabilized approach criteria, the company already knows what you're doing and is (a) about ready to drop the information on the desk at a hearing or (b) wait until you break something and bring down the hammer.
Looking cool and being the "good guy" isn't high on my list of priorities with SLC ATC.
I don't want to interrupt the collective eye-rolling at ATC, but maybe they were just genuinely curious.
If ATC doesn't understand why a requested operation isn't desirable, why would they stop offering it if most other aircraft take the instruction?
Of course there's no reason to be snotty about it, but Derg didn't specify whether they were or not. Whatever, I'm not here.
There was some "butthurtedness" on ground control it seems, I'll have it liveATC it.
I don't want to interrupt the collective eye-rolling at ATC, but maybe they were just genuinely curious.
My dad told me a similar story of a time a controller down in Mexico asked him a similar question, but IIRC the issue on his case was requesting a visual in VMC and the controller denying both the visual approach and refusing to "accept" cancelling IFR. It was amongst those lines. Anyhow, long story short, My dad's reply (who was much abrasive at that time) was "hey, I'm PIC, the buck stops with me".I turned down a sidestep request inside the marker and got a "Is there a reason you wouldn't accept the sidestep?" on ground.
Good idea. Informal information requests aren't unheard of on frequency though.
It is pretty hilarious that the visual maneuver of switching from one parallel runway to another requires any button-pushing at all.