pericynthion
Pre-takeoff checklist
Scenario: small, busy, towered airport with a single short runway.
I enter the pattern according to instructions on a right downwind. There's some slow guy ahead of me on right downwind, and other traffic on left downwind. First I am asked to perform a left 360 for spacing from the guy ahead. OK. Then I am told of traffic on the left downwind (opposite side of the airfield), asked to report in sight, which I do. Told "Follow that aircraft, cleared to land #3".
I turn right 90 degrees, cross the field perpendicular to the runway, enter a left downwind, follow the aircraft in question, and land. Taxi, get fuel and passenger, call ground for departure and am asked to phone the tower.
As it turns out, the instruction "follow that aircraft" does not literally mean to follow that aircraft. Instead, I should have extended my right downwind until there was sufficient spacing for him to turn left base and land, then I should have turned right base and landed. The more you know!
I'm always ready to ask for clarification if an instruction is confusing, but in this case I thought it was pretty clear - and I was totally wrong about what it meant. There was no real safety hazard this time, but in other circumstances there could have been. Just thought I would throw this out there so maybe some other person doesn't get caught off guard.
I enter the pattern according to instructions on a right downwind. There's some slow guy ahead of me on right downwind, and other traffic on left downwind. First I am asked to perform a left 360 for spacing from the guy ahead. OK. Then I am told of traffic on the left downwind (opposite side of the airfield), asked to report in sight, which I do. Told "Follow that aircraft, cleared to land #3".
I turn right 90 degrees, cross the field perpendicular to the runway, enter a left downwind, follow the aircraft in question, and land. Taxi, get fuel and passenger, call ground for departure and am asked to phone the tower.
As it turns out, the instruction "follow that aircraft" does not literally mean to follow that aircraft. Instead, I should have extended my right downwind until there was sufficient spacing for him to turn left base and land, then I should have turned right base and landed. The more you know!
I'm always ready to ask for clarification if an instruction is confusing, but in this case I thought it was pretty clear - and I was totally wrong about what it meant. There was no real safety hazard this time, but in other circumstances there could have been. Just thought I would throw this out there so maybe some other person doesn't get caught off guard.