Chris_Ford
Well-Known Member
flyguy said:The other spoke about 5 words of English when he got here and took it upon himself to improve. . . . Within about 2 months, his English had improved about 400%.
So he speaks 20 words now?
flyguy said:The other spoke about 5 words of English when he got here and took it upon himself to improve. . . . Within about 2 months, his English had improved about 400%.
Haha!!! Well, maybe 5 words was an an exaggeration, but 400% improvement is pretty close.Chris_Ford said:So he speaks 20 words now?![]()
mtsu_av8er said:I personally hate it when people refer to the departure leg as the upwind leg . . . . . AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
flyguy said:...I don't recall ever flying with anyone, nor even hearing anyone on the radio call it anything other than the upwind leg. Maybe its the AIM that needs to change. Because lets say someone is actually on the real upwind leg and announce themselves as such. Most people will look for them on the departure leg. If someone announces they are on the departure leg, I'd guess thre would be a few pilots who might not understand that at all. (Especially students who's English is marginal) ....
John Herreshoff said:Since we're talking about things that bug people on the radio, how about "taking the active." ....
The same thing that is wrong with landing on a Taxiway, taxiing at 40 knots, and ignoring radio calls. It's not the right way to do it.flyguy said:What is the big deal about calling it the upwind leg????
If 100 people do the wrong thing, it's still the wrong thing.I mean I know what is in the AIM, and I know what the difference is between the departure leg and the upwind leg, but there is no denying that it is common phraseology to call it the upwind leg.
Why is there a need to say more, then?May not be exactly proper phraseology . . .
Incompetence is pretty common!. . . it is very common. So much so that I don't recall ever flying with anyone, nor even hearing anyone on the radio call it anything other than the upwind leg.
So, the AIM should change to suit the needs of the incompetent pilots at your home field? Go learn to fly the correct way, learn how to use a radio the correct way, then come back and finish this conversation. I can't even believe that you'd say something so stupid. Really.Maybe its the AIM that needs to change. Because lets say someone is actually on the real upwind leg and announce themselves as such. Most people will look for them on the departure leg. If someone announces they are on the departure leg, I'd guess thre would be a few pilots who might not understand that at all. (Especially students who's English is marginal)
You know, some of us do . . .Does everybody pronounce it "tree", "fife", "kay-beck" etc?
Josh said:4-3-2 c
"6. Departure leg. The flight path which begins after takeoff and continues straight ahead along the extended runway centerline. The departure climb continues until reaching a point at least 1/2 mile beyond the departure end of the runway and within 300 feet of the traffic pattern altitude."
Chris_Ford said:So what's your answer for this ^^^ post then, Lloyd?
mtsu_av8er said:I'm confused as to what the post is asking . . .
Chris_Ford said:Well I think the o.p. was saying that the AIM has clearly defined "Departure leg" so if you meet those qualifications, why not call it as such?
mtsu_av8er said:What are you talking about? Chris, I never said that it should be called anything else.
Chris_Ford said:um well, let's just say I'm really really drunk, because that will explain why I can't effing read. My bad![]()
mtsu_av8er said:That's how you ended up on my ignore list in the first place.![]()
Chris_Ford said:Even though you've shown numerous times that you don't use it. But it's cool to pretend to ignore me too.
I love how you're never wrong Lloyd. You're just another know-it-all CFI in a sea of 'em. Hope you're proud of your wonderful knowledge. Too bad you can dish it out but not take it either... or take a joke.
:whatever: