How Close is Too Close

NealRomeoGolf

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You're VFR. You see another plane converging on your path at the same altitude. You have him on ADSB. You have him visually. It appears you are faster than him. You continue and, according to ADBS data, you come within one mile of each other with the other plane passing behind you.

Had this happen yesterday. Based on data available to me he would pass behind me and he did. Thought about descending for separation but didn't. Maybe I should have. I was heading 010 and he was probably 050.

Was 1 mile too close? I was talking to ATC, he wasn't. ATC was fine, as they should be, as long as I had visual. They did ask a couple times though.

We fly 1000 feet (way less than a mile) vertical separation all the time, but the vertical vector has less speed than the horizontal. Maybe I should have descended.
 
Far enough apart so that you do not create a collision hazzard.

14 CFR 91.113 has the right of way rules and 91.13 also would apply.

Not every detail is defined.
 
You're VFR. You see another plane converging on your path at the same altitude. You have him on ADSB. You have him visually. It appears you are faster than him. You continue and, according to ADBS data, you come within one mile of each other with the other plane passing behind you.

Had this happen yesterday. Based on data available to me he would pass behind me and he did. Thought about descending for separation but didn't. Maybe I should have. I was heading 010 and he was probably 050.

Was 1 mile too close? I was talking to ATC, he wasn't. ATC was fine, as they should be, as long as I had visual. They did ask a couple times though.

We fly 1000 feet (way less than a mile) vertical separation all the time, but the vertical vector has less speed than the horizontal. Maybe I should have descended.

Doesn’t sound to close to me. You saw him and predicted accurately he would pass behind you. Why do something unpredictable to other pilots like changing altitude if it’s not needed?
 
If I can count the people inside the other aircraft, that’s too close for me
 
Sounds fine to me.
 
Was able to wave back to a 737 Southwest pilot once...that was kinda close.

*We did have each other on visual BTW
 
Was able to wave back to a 737 Southwest pilot once...that was kinda close.

*We did have each other on visual BTW
Like this Southwest jet passing 700ft below as he was going into SNA?
 

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IFR flight plan about ten minutes east of Baltimore and my ADSB and TIS-B light up an aircraft passing overhead by 500 feet, never called out. My bride and I saw him at the last few seconds right before the alert.
 
Doesn’t sound scarily close. The comment I would make though is that you had him in sight. That’s great! When you see traffic on the fish finder, process the data, but don’t allow yourself to get distracted by it. For me if I don’t have them in sight it’s a different concern, but I try not to get so focused on it that I’m not paying attention to the things I should be paying attention to.

If they are a mile away, on a collision course at the same or nearly the same altitude, that’s different from being a mile away NOT on a collision course.
 
IFR flight plan about ten minutes east of Baltimore and my ADSB and TIS-B light up an aircraft passing overhead by 500 feet, never called out. My bride and I saw him at the last few seconds right before the alert.
Had the same thing happen to me while in the clouds near Knoxville TN. Broke into a gap around rain clouds to see a PC12 cross from my left to right 500 above and less than a mile. Got an apology from ATC who forgot to call it out. Nothing to worry about but was a bit of a shock after being so accustomed to large separation and constant traffic call outs.
 
I was less than 1 sm from a C-17 once. He had to stop his climb until I was past him. A number of years ago as I was flying from OLM to PUW on an IFR plan. I wish I had had a camera available, you don't get to look down on an airborne C-17 too often.
 
My airport is 6 miles from Tinker Airforce Base. I get to see up close regularly, E3s B1Bs, B52s, just to name a few. We're right in their flight path for their "downwind".
 
You're VFR. You see another plane converging on your path at the same altitude. You have him on ADSB. You have him visually. It appears you are faster than him. You continue and, according to ADBS data, you come within one mile of each other with the other plane passing behind you.

Had this happen yesterday. Based on data available to me he would pass behind me and he did. Thought about descending for separation but didn't. Maybe I should have. I was heading 010 and he was probably 050.

Was 1 mile too close? I was talking to ATC, he wasn't. ATC was fine, as they should be, as long as I had visual. They did ask a couple times though.

We fly 1000 feet (way less than a mile) vertical separation all the time, but the vertical vector has less speed than the horizontal. Maybe I should have descended.
Hypothetically, would you have seen him had you not been talking to ATC or had ADS-b?
 
1 mile?
Were you able to keep 1% of that separation on your drive to the airport?
 
If I can read their tail number, I’m too close, but in your example, I wouldn’t be too concerned. 1 mile separation, as long as you have visual on the traffic, is no big deal.
 
Hypothetically, would you have seen him had you not been talking to ATC or had ADS-b?
Eventually. I saw him first thanks to ADSB. I probably wouldn't have seen that spec that early (about 6 miles) had I not had him on my GPS screen.
 
Eventually. I saw him first thanks to ADSB. I probably wouldn't have seen that spec that early (about 6 miles) had I not had him on my GPS screen.
Just asking for all those not keen on the new tech. I know guys that have moved to an airport outside the Ohare mode C veil so they wouldn't have to spend 2 AMU's on a tail beacon.
 
Just asking for all those not keen on the new tech. I know guys that have moved to an airport outside the Ohare mode C veil so they wouldn't have to spend 2 AMU's on a tail beacon.
I'm a big fan of adsb. I find it to be a huge help.
 
I'm a big fan of adsb. I find it to be a huge help.

Me too. I installed my ADS-B transponder back in 2014, long before the mandate. Very useful here in SoCal, especially around uncontrolled airport. Makes arrival planning much easier.
 
I was heading 010 and he was probably 050

From the sound of your headings, he was to your left going to your right. According to the FAA and also boats and cars, the one coming from the right to left has right of way and should maintain their course. The one one the left is supposed to give way.
That’s IF the other guy sees you.

It’s best to make the course adjustments obvious and early if your going to do it. The worst thing you can do is be the “stand on” one with the right of way changing course and speed which confuses the hell out of the guy that’s supposed to give way.

Here’s what the FAA says:

§ 91.113 Right-of-way rules: Except water operations.
(a) Inapplicability. This section does not apply to the operation of an aircraft on water.

(b) General. When weather conditions permit, regardless of whether an operation is conducted under instrument flight rules or visual flight rules, vigilance shall be maintained by each person operating an aircraftso as to see and avoid other aircraft. When a rule of this section gives another aircraft the right-of-way, the pilot shall give way to that aircraft and may not pass over, under, or ahead of it unless well clear.

(c) In distress. An aircraft in distress has the right-of-way over all other air traffic.

(d) Converging. When aircraft of the same category are converging at approximately the same altitude (except head-on, or nearly so), the aircraft to the other's right has the right-of-way. If the aircraft are of different categories -
 
I had a similar situation recently while VFR. Even though I saw the other aircraft (after being alerted by ADSB), I wasn't sure that we would pass each other (we were roughly 90 degrees to each other). Therefore, decided to decent a couple hundred feet. Definitely raised my comfort level.
 
The scariest time for me was in my early days of training.
My instructor and I were heading back to our airport. There was another plane between us and our airport about 1-2 miles ahead practicing steep turns right at our altitude. It would go left, then right, then up, the down, then turn again then something else.
I said to my instructor “what should I do about this guy in front of us? I can’t tell what the hell he’s doing!”
“What guy? I don’t see him.” Said my instructor with a shrug.
“Right in front of us!” I said.

Fortunately the other plane dove away at a right angle....
 
A mile? That’s a lot of air in between. Then again I grew up (am growing up) under Chicago’s bravo where I’ve been scarred already a few dozen times.
 
If you see it coming, no harm in dropping altitude. Don’t wait for the other guy to make a move.
 
If you see it coming, no harm in dropping altitude. Don’t wait for the other guy to make a move.

The danger is he or she may also randomly decide to “drop altitude” as well, leading to the aviation equivalent of a hallway “stutter step”.

I think maintaining heading and altitude will work nearly all the time. On the rare occasion it won’t, be very alert to the fact that if you decide to take evasive action, the other aircraft may as well and maintain or even amplify the collision hazard.
 
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