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Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Tue Jul 06, 2004 9:43 pm
by jrpilot
Hello,

When you takeoff on a sid or departing on a star...do you fly the sid/star with instructions from ATC or do you let the FMC fly the SID/STAR?

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 1:44 pm
by Nexus
I usually never listen to the ATC commands, they have no clue about the real world approach routes anyway so I disregard them as much as I can (quite the opposite what you'd do in real-life) ;D

It's not rare that real world ATC will tell you to divert from the STAR or put you in a holding pattern so they can have a smoother traffic flow

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 1:55 pm
by jrpilot
I was watching a video of a cokpit flight and after departure the pilot flew all commands from ATC by hand that seems weird...I understand flying upto a few thounsand feet but this pilot flew way up to 10,000 feet....I would think he would use the autopilot to fly the ATC headings

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 2:07 pm
by Craig.
why?  some pilots like to fly manually as much as possible. Others will hit the autopilot button asap. The whole point of autopilot is to reduce pilot work and fatigue.

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 2:23 pm
by Nexus
What Crag said

Also, some airports don't have official pre-determined departure routes so all departures has to go via ATC :)

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 2:34 pm
by jrpilot
O.....I just thought it would seemed to be hard to hold a certain heading....because of such factors as wind.

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 2:40 pm
by Craig.
nah these things tend to be easier to fly than some light aircraft apparently. gonna be a while till i find that out though ::)

Re: Question about a takeoff...Nexus

PostPosted: Wed Jul 07, 2004 3:14 pm
by Nexus
You don't have to correct for wind when flying ATC vectoring, they'll account for wind-drift for you ;)

So if ATC say "Speedbird XXX, turn left heading 185", you'll rotate the heading knob until it reads 185, it's THAT easy ;)

However things gets trickier if you're flying under ICAO regulations and you are flying a published route with a