missed approach without holding pattern?

Do yourself a favor -- read 14 CFR 91.185, the AIM, and FAA Ordere 7110.65 and stop listening to a couple of random people who are not authorized to speak for the FAA on this topic.

And unless someone other than KAdriver has a question, I'm done.

LOL!!! Now, controllers are "random" people..

So, let me get this straight, you assert that the person that will be handling the lost comm emergency has no idea about the regs or procedures for handling the emergency??

REALLY??

OMG!!
 
Nonsense?? Seriously, call your local ARTCC and talk to a controller. Everything I said is EXACTLY what the controller supervisor told me yesterday.

I love it when someone jumps in on a conversation without facts or phone calls to those that would know..

People love to guess about what they think they know without ever verifying.

There's nothing for me to verify here. I don't have to guess, I know. I've been a controller over 28 years, nine years at Chicago ARTCC, 19 at Green Bay ATCT/TRACON. The reality of this is just not the way you believe it to be. If you actually had a conversation yesterday with someone at ZDV that person was way off the mark or you misunderstood what you were told, and the latter is far more likely.

Make a call then we can talk. In the mean time, I'm going to go talk to the dog..
That's a good idea. Converse with species closer to your intellectual level and work your way up.
 
What a Center sup says isn't relevant on this question. You call the FAA Flight Standards Procedures Branch (AFS-420) or AFS-820 (which writes Part 91 flight rules) and ask them about the purpose of designating an alternate.

Ron,

I've been busy this morning digging for official answers.

I took your advice and called both AFS-420 and AFS-820.

Neither could tell me the reason for filing an alternate.

AFS-420 deals with determining if an airport meets the criteria for an alternate using standard Wx. Meaning, if the lowest mins are higher than 600-2 or 800-2, then they will issue a higher than standard alternate mins. (This is something I dealt with my entire career)

AFS-820 handles the regs, but he couldn't give me the reason for filing alternates (he didn't even want to speculate) and referred my to the legal website which deals with "legal interpretations" of the FAR's. I reached a dead end there.

So, what are we left with??

A controller supervisor at DEN ATRCC telling me that if you're lost comm and you miss at your destination, you are EXPECTED to proceed to your alternate. You are NOT on your own as you suggested. (What kind of advice is that??) and the reason behind filing for an alternate is lost comm.

This is what I have always known and what I'll go with.

Have you calledl ARTCC yet??

I spent almost my entire career slogging around in the Rockies. Many days, I was "lost comm" (because of limited RCO's and poor line of sight) and you couldn't get the controller on the miss. We had to work out a plan before I started down and lost comm and radar. For instance: "If I have to miss, I'll proceed direct to XYZ" (alternate) or "I won't be able to talk to you at 11,000 on the miss. Request 13,000 for the miss". etc etc

The airlines changed a lot of the comm problems when they started frequenting the ski resorts.

If their are any old Rocky Mtn region non-scheduled IFR pilots here, they can verify what it was like.

So, I have many years and hours of actual lost comm experience, the sup at ARTCC said the same thing, etc

Hmmm I'm good to go...lol
 
There's nothing for me to verify here. I don't have to guess, I know. I've been a controller over 28 years, nine years at Chicago ARTCC, 19 at Green Bay ATCT/TRACON. The reality of this is just not the way you believe it to be. If you actually had a conversation yesterday with someone at ZDV that person was way off the mark or you misunderstood what you were told, and the latter is far more likely.

That's a good idea. Converse with species closer to your intellectual level and work your way up.

Sreve:

Do you have to stoop to insults??

Is that what you do when you get flustered??
 
If you're gonna lob 'em I'm gonna hit 'em.

BTW, it was you that said you were going to talk to the dog.

I don't know, I've never been flustered.

Steve: I may have missed it, but what's your official explanation for filing alternates.

What's the reasoning behind it??
 
A controller supervisor at DEN ATRCC telling me that if you're lost comm and you miss at your destination, you are EXPECTED to proceed to your alternate. You are NOT on your own as you suggested. (What kind of advice is that??) and the reason behind filing for an alternate is lost comm.

If he actually said that he was wrong. But he probably didn't say it, you just heard what you wanted to.

I can easily clear this up by contacting the fellow you spoke with. What was his name?

I spent almost my entire career slogging around in the Rockies. Many days, I was "lost comm" (because of limited RCO's and poor line of sight) and you couldn't get the controller on the miss. We had to work out a plan before I started down and lost comm and radar. For instance: "If I have to miss, I'll proceed direct to XYZ" (alternate) or "I won't be able to talk to you at 11,000 on the miss. Request 13,000 for the miss". etc etcl

Well now that's odd, given that communications must exist down to airway MEAs and at the missed approach altitude.
 
If he actually said that he was wrong. But he probably didn't say it, you just heard what you wanted to.

I can easily clear this up by contacting the fellow you spoke with. What was his name?



Well now that's odd, given that communications must exist down to airway MEAs and at the missed approach altitude.

Well, in theory, that's great.

In the real life, not's so good.

After spending some time in a hold at the miss trying to contact center and then having someone above you relay you intentions to center, you devise plans a head of time. Center was all for it.

You must not have spent any time flying or controlling the mountains, ro you would know this..

You haven't answered my question:

What is your official reason behind the need to file for alternates??
 
Well, in theory, that's great.

In the real life, not's so good.

It's not a theory.

After spending some time in a hold at the miss trying to contact center and then having someone above you relay you intentions to center, you devise plans a head of time. Center was all for it.

You must not have spent any time flying or controlling the mountains, ro you would know this..
Perhaps you were calling center when you should have been calling radio. Communications is required to exist at the missed approach altitude, the requirement is not for direct pilot-controller communications. If the minimum altitude required for the missed approach is not sufficient for communications the altitude will be raised for communications purposes.

You haven't answered my question:

What is your official reason behind the need to file for alternates??
I know I haven't, nor have you answered all of the questions I've posed to you.
 
It's not a theory.

Perhaps you were calling center when you should have been calling radio. Communications is required to exist at the missed approach altitude, the requirement is not for direct pilot-controller communications. If the minimum altitude required for the missed approach is not sufficient for communications the altitude will be raised for communications purposes.

I know I haven't, nor have you answered all of the questions I've posed to you.

I knew who to call and what I was doing. I visited some of these airports on a regular basis for over 20 years. Keep trying..lol

So, you know that alternates are not about lost comm, but you have no friggn idea why we file them...LOL!!!!

:mad2::mad2::mad2::mad2:
 
I knew who to call and what I was doing. I visited some of these airports on a regular basis for over 20 years. Keep trying..lol

So, you know that alternates are not about lost comm, but you have no friggn idea why we file them...LOL!!!!

These things are simply not as you've described them. The logical conclusion is you've fabricated them. You're just a troll, and the best way to deal with trolls is to ignore them.
 
These things are simply not as you've described them. The logical conclusion is you've fabricated them. You're just a troll, and the best way to deal with trolls is to ignore them.

I'm amazed that someone who claims to have 28 years in as a controller, can not answer the simple question of why we file for alternates..

If you just say you don't know, that would be an acceptable answer..

You just don't have a clue, do you??
 
I'm amazed that someone who claims to have 28 years in as a controller, can not answer the simple question of why we file for alternates..

If you just say you don't know, that would be an acceptable answer..

You just don't have a clue, do you??

You've only been here one month, and you're already implying that a longstanding member is either lying about his qualifications, or clueless about his area of professional expertise?

By the way, I recognize that the unique conditions in the Rocky Mountains may argue for procedures that differ from the rest of the country.
 
You've only been here one month, and you're already implying that a longstanding member is either lying about his qualifications, or clueless about his area of professional expertise?


By the way, I recognize that the unique conditions in the Rocky Mountains may argue for procedures that differ from the rest of the country.

But it's okay for someone that's a longstanding member to attack, insult, and call a poster a liar that's only been here a month??

Did you even bother to read the thread??

Steve said I was wrong (I'm not) and when I asked him to tell me the answer, he wouldn't. So, three possibilities: he doesn't know the answer, he's being childish (I've got a secret and I ain't tell'n) which does no one any good here that would like to learn (this is an important question!!), or he found out that I'm right and he can't admit it.

Anyway, I figured what's going on here..

I came to this thread looking to talk to other pilots. Share experiences and ideas. Learn some of the new stuff. Help some of the students and low time pilots wanting to learn.

And, as is typical with most forums on the internet, you're attacked..

It really is sad..(must be some kind of territorial thing)

Anyway, I spent 27 years of flying single pilot. (20 of those years in King Airs) I was out almost everyday in the environment. You know, the REAL world.

So, you get into a discussion with someone that has never been there. This person flies a couple of times a month and maybe flies an IFR trip once or twice a year. He/she has never been on an approach to a mountain airport and missed, yet they're an expert on it.

Sure, you're supposed to have good radio on the MEA and at the MAF. In the REAL world?? A lot of times, it doesn't happen. (Ever have a controller give you lost comm instructions?? It happens all of the time around here. If radio is supposed to work on an airway at MEA, then why would they give it to you on a regular basis?? Oh yeah, the REAL world) or an alternate missed approach clearance?? Ever get either of those??

The worse part of this whole thing is when someone says you're wrong, they can't follow up with why.

I made phone calls to DEN ARTCC, Oak City, and DC looking for answers from the Feds. Did anyone else follow up?? Not that I could see.

Flying is a VERY dangerous activity and wrong information can get people killed. (Putting your alt route in your FP remarks may not get you killed, but other "advice" certainly can)

Aviation is full of incorrect info passed along from one gen to another. (two good examples are when to use carb heat and the definition on maneuvering speed)

So, I'm not going to get involved in heated topic discussions with someone that claims to know, but doesn't or hasn't done it, or simply doesn't know the answer. It's just a waste of time. I feel that anyone reading the thread can draw their own conclusions.

Final comment:

Filing for alternates comes from an era when radar coverage and radio communication was sparse and unreliable.

The intent was, if it's looks like you may have a problem getting in at your destination and you have to miss with lost comm, we EXPECT you to go to your alternate. (IFR is about EXPECTATIONS. I fact, I ran across one of Steve's posts from 2009 where he highlighted the VERY same comment!!) Because the airport at that time may have been non-radar, and separation was provided manually. Makes sense, huh?? Flying around in the Rockies 20-30 years ago was a lot like ARTCC in the 40's and 50's. Lots of lost comm and non-radar. You had to know your non-radar-lost comm procedures. Like position reports, etc

Have you ever actually planned the route to your alternate?? If no, why not?? You're supposed to plan your flight and it's a potential part of your flight. If you have to go there for whatever reason, are you going to figure it out at the MAF with your hands full?? That's not very good flight planning.

If you fly an airway to your alt, center will expect at the MEA, right??

WHY NOT put your alt route in remarks?? Would it hurt anything?? Heck no!!!! Could it maybe help in some way?? Heck yes!!!! The controllers I used to work with everyday liked it. That's good enough for me!! I really don't care what some Chicago controller thinks about it. It's irrelevant.

I think the way I do for a reason and it kept me alive for all of those years. Maybe someone else would like to know a little about how I did it.

And that's what flying should be about..
 
I came to this thread looking to talk to other pilots...

I spent 27 years of flying single pilot...

I think the way I do for a reason and it kept me alive for all of those years. Maybe someone else would like to know a little about how I did it.
You're overdue for some peer-review then. :) Yes, putting an alternate route in "Remarks" is clever. Yes, comms are dropped in certain areas even though they aren't supposed to be--even back East. Yes, certain prolific posters here and elsewhere are often wrong and they can be revealed. But you need to choose your battles!

Why does it make sense to commit to a course of action hours before you may decide to do something else when the forecasted weather proves erroneous?

Since the regs 1) don't support your contention, but 2) they do support the idea of requiring a fuel load that gives a certain radius of action after a missed approach, and since 3) I don't want ATC assuming my flight is separated from yours because you're still doing, in the face of deteriorating weather, what you thought was best hours ago, 4) I'm siding with those prolific posters I mentioned above--with a great deal of discomfort I have to say!

The point you make, IMO, is better in the context of an 'expected' route clearance just prior to shooting an approach in marginal weather (or poor communications at the missed approach end-point). Wouldn't requesting an expected route at that time satisfy your concerns while not restricting you to an older, outdated, self-imposed restriction, i.e., this morning's stale 'Plan A'?

dtuuri
 
Ray is completely off base on the actual history and intent of the requirement for an alternate. The issue was and remains forcing pilots to have enough fuel to have adequate options. That's all it was, and that's all it is.

As for putting an alternate route in the Remarks block, that is not suggested, recommended, or even hinted at in any FAA publication or by any office in the FAA Flight Standards Service. In addition, it could confuse ATC if they think that means you'll do one thing upon going missed, but because conditions have changed since the data on which the alternate was based was collected (typically 6-12 hours before you actually reach that point), you actually do something else.
 
Steve said I was wrong (I'm not) and when I asked him to tell me the answer, he wouldn't. So, three possibilities: he doesn't know the answer, he's being childish (I've got a secret and I ain't tell'n) which does no one any good here that would like to learn (this is an important question!!), or he found out that I'm right and he can't admit it.

Many of us have complained about his rhetorical style, and we don't always agree with what he says, but I have found that it's generally a mistake to assume that he is motivated by ignorance.
 
OK, I am definitely the new guy here (I registered some time back but only posted once) and I am not going to get into the popcorn-draining aspects of this BUT I am wrapping up my IR and am curious about the actual procedure.

In the, I would imagine, unlikely event, that you go missed, fly to FESIK, and discover that you have lose comm, what DO you do?

1. Try again at LVK? Sure, you can follow the airways back and ATC will make space for you but why burn the fuel if you already went missed there.

2. Fly to your filed alternate. Why would you not do that? You have to go somewhere. You determined when you filed it as alternate that it would likely have acceptable weather. You have lose comm. You are IMC. How are you going to find a better option (assuming no satellite or cell options). Fly to your alternate, whatever route, land earlier if you can.

3. Fly back to better weather. Sure, if you know there is better weather behind you, and you know that better weather has a runway within range, then OK. Do that.

My guess is, you are in an emergency situation, and anything you do that is reasonable will be fine. The idea is just to find someplace to set down and you take your best shot at that.
 
And for option 1, I am assuming a solid layer, not something that you think you can work with by going back.

Wouldn't ATC see all three of those as possible actions? Wouldn't they see you heading off in one of three directions; back to LVK, toward your filed alternate, or back the way you came; and figure out your intentions?
 
OK, I am definitely the new guy here (I registered some time back but only posted once) and I am not going to get into the popcorn-draining aspects of this BUT I am wrapping up my IR and am curious about the actual procedure.

In the, I would imagine, unlikely event, that you go missed, fly to FESIK, and discover that you have lose comm, what DO you do?

1. Try again at LVK? Sure, you can follow the airways back and ATC will make space for you but why burn the fuel if you already went missed there.

2. Fly to your filed alternate. Why would you not do that? You have to go somewhere. You determined when you filed it as alternate that it would likely have acceptable weather. You have lose comm. You are IMC. How are you going to find a better option (assuming no satellite or cell options). Fly to your alternate, whatever route, land earlier if you can.

3. Fly back to better weather. Sure, if you know there is better weather behind you, and you know that better weather has a runway within range, then OK. Do that.

My guess is, you are in an emergency situation, and anything you do that is reasonable will be fine. The idea is just to find someplace to set down and you take your best shot at that.

Your guess is correct, you do whatever you determine to be in your own best interest.
 
2. Fly to your filed alternate. Why would you not do that? You have to go somewhere. You determined when you filed it as alternate that it would likely have acceptable weather. You have lose comm. You are IMC. How are you going to find a better option (assuming no satellite or cell options). Fly to your alternate, whatever route, land earlier if you can.

You raise a good point, and it points out the wisdom of getting updates on weather at potential alternates as the flight progresses, so that if you lose comm, you will have relatively recent information.
 
OK, I am definitely the new guy here (I registered some time back but only posted once) and I am not going to get into the popcorn-draining aspects of this BUT I am wrapping up my IR and am curious about the actual procedure.

In the, I would imagine, unlikely event, that you go missed, fly to FESIK, and discover that you have lose comm, what DO you do?

1. Try again at LVK? Sure, you can follow the airways back and ATC will make space for you but why burn the fuel if you already went missed there.

2. Fly to your filed alternate. Why would you not do that? You have to go somewhere. You determined when you filed it as alternate that it would likely have acceptable weather. You have lose comm. You are IMC. How are you going to find a better option (assuming no satellite or cell options). Fly to your alternate, whatever route, land earlier if you can.

3. Fly back to better weather. Sure, if you know there is better weather behind you, and you know that better weather has a runway within range, then OK. Do that.

My guess is, you are in an emergency situation, and anything you do that is reasonable will be fine. The idea is just to find someplace to set down and you take your best shot at that.

Congrats!! You sound like you're going to make a good, logical-thinking IR pilot.

Why hang around an airport that's below minimums with lost comm, adding to an already serious problem, when you can proceed to your alternate (assuming you picked an alternate away from the weather and with reasonably good expectations it will stay in good shape. All part of the planning!!) Plus, if you're flying to better Wx, you may pop in the clear long enough to land somewhere and cancel.

And, if you put your route in the remarks, the controllers have a better idea of what to EXPECT from you.

If you just fly around trying to figure out what to do, the controller has to try and read your mind. You can make there life a little easier by giving them some hints.

Modern avionics and cell phones have changed the game a lot. But, it's still important to know the rules!!

I was trying to remember where I picked up the "remarks" tip and it dawned on me it was from a controller during a DEN ARTCC tour 30+ years ago.
 
In the, I would imagine, unlikely event, that you go missed, fly to FESIK, and discover that you have lose comm, what DO you do?

1. Try again at LVK? Sure, you can follow the airways back and ATC will make space for you but why burn the fuel if you already went missed there.
Depends on why you went missed. If it's because you screwed up (say, got down to MDA too late to be able to land using normal maneuvers and normal rate of descent) but you broke out OK (just too late to land on the runway), you probably would want to go back and do it again right because you're already there and you don't want to use more fuel than necessary.

2. Fly to your filed alternate. Why would you not do that? You have to go somewhere. You determined when you filed it as alternate that it would likely have acceptable weather. You have lose comm. You are IMC. How are you going to find a better option (assuming no satellite or cell options). Fly to your alternate, whatever route, land earlier if you can.
Plenty of possible reasons not to do that. First, maybe the weather there went down in the 4-6 hours since you planned and filed that flight. Second, maybe there are better choices much closer to your destination that you couldn't file as alternates, perhaps because you have a non-WAAS GPS and they only have GPS approaches, but the satellites and your GPS are working just fine and the weather there is known to be pretty good. Third, maybe you got held a bit and your fuel reserves got eaten some, and you don't like the currently computed fuel remaining when you get to that alternate.

3. Fly back to better weather. Sure, if you know there is better weather behind you, and you know that better weather has a runway within range, then OK. Do that.
That's another good option if you know there's much better weather behind you, or beyond your destination, or in a direction opposite where your filed alternate is.

My guess is, you are in an emergency situation, and anything you do that is reasonable will be fine. The idea is just to find someplace to set down and you take your best shot at that.
There's the winner -- you do what seems like the best thing to do at the time you face the decision based on all the data you have at that time, not feel compelled to stick with a choice made many hours ago based on data even more hours old and artificially constrained by various regulations.
 
And, if you put your route in the remarks, the controllers have a better idea of what to EXPECT from you.
So how in the world are you going to know when you select your alternate and file your flight plan what the weather is actually going to be there and elsewhere many hours later when you actually face the problem, and that it won't change from what was predicted those many hours ago?

I was trying to remember where I picked up the "remarks" tip and it dawned on me it was from a controller during a DEN ARTCC tour 30+ years ago.
:mad2: Will you please stop with this verkachte nonsense coming from some undocumented source outside Flight Standards? If the folks in charge of this really wanted us to be doing what your controller pal told you 30 years ago, they would have put it in either 91.185(c), the AIM, or an Advisory Circular, and it's just not there.
 
So how in the world are you going to know when you select your alternate and file your flight plan what the weather is actually going to be there and elsewhere many hours later when you actually face the problem, and that it won't change from what was predicted those many hours ago?

:mad2: Will you please stop with this verkachte nonsense coming from some undocumented source outside Flight Standards? If the folks in charge of this really wanted us to be doing what your controller pal told you 30 years ago, they would have put it in either 91.185(c), the AIM, or an Advisory Circular, and it's just not there.

Do you ever look at weather charts to see what the systems are doing??

It's funny that in all the years I put an alternate route in remarks, I only heard thank you's and what great help it was. Until now. From some obscure poster on a forum.

Now run along and fly your little Champ on the weekends and leave the REAL world Wx flying to the pros.

Still afraid to answer why we have to file for alternates??

Is this where you start with the insults??
 
Now run along and fly your little Champ on the weekends and leave the REAL world Wx flying to the pros.
:rofl: You've got no idea.

Still afraid to answer why we have to file for alternates??
I believe I did, several times. But just for you, here it is again: "The issue was and remains forcing pilots to have enough fuel to have adequate options. That's all it was, and that's all it is."

Is this where you start with the insults??
No need -- you've got that market cornered.
 
:rofl: You've got no idea.

I believe I did, several times. But just for you, here it is again: "The issue was and remains forcing pilots to have enough fuel to have adequate options. That's all it was, and that's all it is."

Oh yeah, you're the guy that said that needing an alternate is in the regs because pilots are a bunch of idiots and have to be told they need fuel to fly..

Hmmmm

Not buying it. Nope, not at all..

Just curious, what kind of pro flying did you do?? Air carrier, corporate, other??
 
:mad2: Will you please stop with this verkachte nonsense coming from some undocumented source outside Flight Standards? If the folks in charge of this really wanted us to be doing what your controller pal told you 30 years ago, they would have put it in either 91.185(c), the AIM, or an Advisory Circular, and it's just not there.

So what exactly are those folks in charge of?
 
I believe I did, several times. But just for you, here it is again: "The issue was and remains forcing pilots to have enough fuel to have adequate options. That's all it was, and that's all it is."

Ron,

Having sufficient fuel reserves is an important aspect of the alternate requirement, but one must also do the planning to select an airport that has a forecast for better than minimum IFR weather, has local weather reporting and has monitoring capability for the approaches and facilities that the aircraft is equipped to use for navigation on said approach(es). A complete analysis would also include where the nearest VFR weather is and what other airports would also present themselves as viable options. I agree that I would not be tied down to the filed alternate as my only option, as pilots are also expected to use judgement and base their decisions on the latest data.
 
Ray, 3. Ronca+Ron+John+DaveT(a former DPE)+everyone else, 24. Not even to halftime yet.:popcorn:

BTW, I agree, contrary to some un-named supervisor, that the ATCer is going to watch to see what he has to do to maintain separation. The filed alternate probably went below mins long ago.....usually my alternate has to be 150 nm away to be reliably useable (watch these springtime fronts wtih 1000 miles of 200/1), but if there is someplace I know I can get into, I'm going in THERE.
 
Ray, 3. Ronca+Ron+John+DaveT(a former DPE)+everyone else, 24. Not even to halftime yet.:popcorn:

BTW, I agree, contrary to some un-named supervisor, that the ATCer is going to watch to see what he has to do to maintain separation. The filed alternate probably went below mins long ago.....usually my alternate has to be 150 nm away to be reliably useable (watch these springtime fronts wtih 1000 miles of 200/1), but if there is someplace I know I can get into, I'm going in THERE.

wow, between your "probably" and Ron's many "maybes", I'm surprised you haven't thrown in a maybe/probably alien abduction, too..

Go where ever you want, I don't care. Just don't fall out of the sky into my backyard, okay?
 
Also, it's impossible to discuss flying in the REAL IFR world with weekend warriors that only fly a couple of approaches a year under the hood.
 
Also, it's impossible to discuss flying in the REAL IFR world with weekend warriors that only fly a couple of approaches a year under the hood.

I'm sorry, but you have no idea with whom you are talking.
 
Also, it's impossible to discuss flying in the REAL IFR world with weekend warriors that only fly a couple of approaches a year under the hood.
whoooa. You picked the wrong guy. How little you know. Now you're getting personal because your argument has failed. I would call IFR in Asia and the Pacific Rim over 172,000 lbs to be real IFR.

Ooh. Wow. A KING AIR driver. I could carry eight of them in the back, back in the day. Disassembled, of course. I recognize your argument and it has to do with "I can P*ss farther than you"....great debate technique...NOT.

Ya know, if you go back to post #9 (you CAN read that far back, I hope) all I did was observe that FESIK is on the V airway system and the lack of a hold is therefore not significant...and then I watched you bumble into a room....and made one comment.

No more comments for me. I'm enjoying the popcorn. Have at.


:popcorn:
 
Last edited:
whoooa. You picked the wrong guy. How little you know. Now you're getting personal because your argument has failed. I would call IFR in Asia and the Pacific Rim over 172,000 lbs to be real IFR.

Ooh. Wow. A KING AIR driver. I could carry eight of them in the back, back in the day. Disassembled, of course. I recognize your argument and it has to do with "I can P*ss farther than you"....great debate technique...NOT.

Ya know, if you go back to post #9 (you CAN read that far back, I hope) all I did was observe that FESIK is on the V airway system and the lack of a hold is therefore not significant...and then I watched you bumble into a room....and made one comment.

No more comments for me. I'm enjoying the popcorn. Have at.


:popcorn:

Well said. People are certainly entitled to their opinions--and yes, especially those based on experience. But personal attacks based on nearly no knowledge of the person on whom the attack is launched? Well, I think most of the POA readers are smart enough to tell the difference between educated debate and angry chest-beating.
 
California has enough mountains and microclimates so that I don't have any trouble at all believing that the procedure Ray described may work well and be appreciated by ATC in the Rockies. From the comments of various pilots though, it's pretty obvious that the optimum procedure in one type of terrain and weather pattern may not work well elsewhere.
 
California has enough mountains and microclimates so that I don't have any trouble at all believing that the procedure Ray described may work well and be appreciated by ATC in the Rockies. From the comments of various pilots though, it's pretty obvious that the optimum procedure in one type of terrain and weather pattern may not work well elsewhere.
I fly IFR in the Rockies and I have never put the alternate or the routing in the remarks. I have also never known anyone else to do so or seen it suggested before yesterday.

Also, if they have no radar or radio contact because of terrain how do they know you have missed the approach and are proceeding to your alternate. You could have crashed.
 
Last edited:
I fly IFR in the Rockies and I have never put the alternate or the routing in the remarks. I have also never known anyone else to do so or seen it suggested before yesterday.

Also, if they have no radar or radio contact because of terrain how do they know you have missed the approach and are proceeding to your alternate. You could have crashed.

No doubt Ray will be along to tell you that you are a weekend warrior who doesn't fly in the REAL IFR world. :rofl:
 
whoooa. You picked the wrong guy. How little you know. Now you're getting personal because your argument has failed. I would call IFR in Asia and the Pacific Rim over 172,000 lbs to be real IFR.

Ooh. Wow. A KING AIR driver. I could carry eight of them in the back, back in the day. Disassembled, of course. I recognize your argument and it has to do with "I can P*ss farther than you"....great debate technique...NOT.

Ya know, if you go back to post #9 (you CAN read that far back, I hope) all I did was observe that FESIK is on the V airway system and the lack of a hold is therefore not significant...and then I watched you bumble into a room....and made one comment.

No more comments for me. I'm enjoying the popcorn. Have at.


:popcorn:

You originally said un-named supervisor. In our TOS, it said not to mention names. You even chewed someone out recently that posted someone's name that was in an official capacity. I even called Oak City and DC. No one else called them, either.

I did, however, post immediately after I talked to the DEN ARTCC and encouraged anyone here to call and talk to him. If you would have called at the time, you would have been able to reach him.No one obviously did.

Which seat did you fly "out over the Pacific"?? Were you actually at the controls and in command??

I'll take my single pilot IFR any day.

"You picked the wrong guy" Umm no I didn't. (and you're a doctor??)

What I did with putting my alternate route in the "remarks" made the controllers I worked with everyday happy. And that's all that matters.

It didn't cost anything. It didn't more take more than a second to add. It didn't screw up the system. And, it could only ENHANCE safety. Plus, I actually planned the trip to the alternate instead of what I used to hear pilots say to FSS all the time "I need an alternate and I don't care where it is". Really??

The alternate is plan of where to go if you have lost comm. ATRCC will EXPECT you to go there. If you miss and you're talking to someone, you don't have to head there. You already know what the Wx is doing.

Back before AWOS and ASOS, you had to be able to talk to someone (unless the field had ATIS) to get the Wx. I planned my alternate to better Wx and on a route with airport under or near the airway. (Have you ever seen DEN in a raging blizzard with everything up and down the front range is at mins or lower and EGE is clear and 50 degrees?? Hmmm pretty good place to have an alternate. And on my way, I'll pass over or near 3 other airports that will probably be clear, too. Land and cancel. We are STILL talking lost comm now)

Or I could have lost comm in the middle of that mess and had ARTCC try and guess where I'm going, effectively shutting down everything in the Denver area. Safety just went out the window, too. Aircraft holding and diverting for me. What a mess, and all because I didn't plan for lost comm.

instead, they just have to worry about this little target headed westbound to, to, to let me look in remarks EGE!! Wow!! That's was slick!!

What I did worked for me. It kept me alive in a very hostile enviroment for many years.

Seriously, who gives a crap if someone puts something in remarks?? Big F'n deal.. if you don't like it, then by all means, don't do it...:mad2:

Hope you didn't lose sleep over it...
 
Back
Top