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Calling for engine starts en français
Not when you're on the departure leg and someone else calls on the upwind. Is he above you? below you? in front? in back? off to the side where he ought to be?
Thats when you ask

Not when you're on the departure leg and someone else calls on the upwind. Is he above you? below you? in front? in back? off to the side where he ought to be?
Before I became an instructor and looked things up I've always been taught 500 agl then turn. In the pattern here at Hooks nobody is going up to 700 agl. I mean for sake of time and landing repetitions for students I think 500 agl is sufficient.
There is the problem with overflying the field for a downwind entry - not the geographical point of entry, but the agressive jumpin'-in-line kinda guy who does it to cut in fron of an already established pattern entry.
When you deviate from the recommended procedure, you take on the responsibility of being dang sure you are not posing a hazard to others who are following book recommended procedure.
What do you mean?What about entry into non standard traffic patterns?
The AIM isn't regulatory in nature. Therefore if you want you can turn x-wind at 500 feet. Just as where you enter the pattern is advisory. I am not saying that we, as pilots, shouldn't follow the AIM, just that you don't have to follow it.
That's only semi-true. The behavior set forth in the AIM has been used in enforcement actions as the standard for safe, prudent, competent pilot behavior. There will have to be some underlying regulatory violation, but 91.13 is pretty much a catch-all. If you were to make an early turn and were involved in a near miss with a properly behaving aircraft on the 45, an FAA Inspector would have a good case for instigating a violation.
Just wondering, how would FAA Inspector know you turned too soon? Or if you flew 100 feet below a cloud?
i feel that it's perhaps more important that i'm locally understood than technically correct with this particular verbiage.
I think the reason "departure leg" lost out to "upwind" is because saying "departure leg" doesn't linguistically flow very well.
"Blah Traffic, Cessna 12345 climbing departure runway 12"
or
"Blah traffic, Cessna 12345 climbing upwind runway 12"
it just flows a little better. The word "departure" has a less specific meaning than "upwind" has, therefore "upwind" is a better word to describe that leg.
If I were the FAA, I'd change the AIM so the departure leg now is called the upwind leg, and whats called the upwind leg now, I'd call it the "parallel leg" or something.
I think the reason "departure leg" lost out to "upwind" is because saying "departure leg" doesn't linguistically flow very well.
Doesn't this become a self-fulfilling prophecy?
I think the reason "departure leg" lost out to "upwind" is because saying "departure leg" doesn't linguistically flow very well.
"Blah Traffic, Cessna 12345 climbing departure runway 12"
or
"Blah traffic, Cessna 12345 climbing upwind runway 12"
it just flows a little better. The word "departure" has a less specific meaning than "upwind" has, therefore "upwind" is a better word to describe that leg.
If I were the FAA, I'd change the AIM so the departure leg now is called the upwind leg, and whats called the upwind leg now, I'd call it the "parallel leg" or something.
Huh? Flows better?
Are you looking to be the Don Juan, the cunning linguist of the air?
I disagree that the words have less specific meaning, they are clearly defined.
Kind of like the quote from 777Forever that I used to make my sig..."Adjust or get left behind"I believe the AIM should follow pilots, not the other way around, at least when it comes to things like phraseology. Why is "departure leg" even there? Did some FAA employee just make it up one day in the 1930's when the AIM was written? (or whichever stupid decade the AIM was written.) Was it at one time the common term pilots used, and therefore the AIM has it in there to reflect that fact? If so, then they need to change it...
Departure, upwind, same difference.
Kind of like the quote from 777Forever that I used to make my sig..."Adjust or get left behind"
All I know is when I'm flying a traffic pattern and someone says they are upwind I'm looking somewhere completely different then the departure leg.