Richard
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2005
- Messages
- 9,076
- Location
- West Coast Resistance
- Display Name
Display name:
Ack...city life
I'm inbound from the west at 2,000 (TPA) just about to enter downwind. ATC calls a Cessna C-172, 2,700' 3 nm, 2 o'clock. I report not in sight. *sigh*
Not more than 30 seconds later I'm mid-field left traffic for 26L and I look below me to see the Cessna at what must've been CTL min alt.
Day-am, I hate this!
I was monitoring TWR for the last 10 minutes and I hadn't heard anything from the Cessna until he acknowledged cleared to land 26L. Neither the Cessna nor ATC advised of practice IFR approach.
Now having looked at the VOR-A plate I see why the rapid change in altitude for the Cessna.
http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0712/05218VGA.PDF
EDIT: And I didn't expect a Category A aircraft to be making 140 KIAS after GOLDI. How else to explain the rapid change of location and altitude?
Not more than 30 seconds later I'm mid-field left traffic for 26L and I look below me to see the Cessna at what must've been CTL min alt.
Day-am, I hate this!
I was monitoring TWR for the last 10 minutes and I hadn't heard anything from the Cessna until he acknowledged cleared to land 26L. Neither the Cessna nor ATC advised of practice IFR approach.
Now having looked at the VOR-A plate I see why the rapid change in altitude for the Cessna.
http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0712/05218VGA.PDF
EDIT: And I didn't expect a Category A aircraft to be making 140 KIAS after GOLDI. How else to explain the rapid change of location and altitude?
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