by beaky » Sat Jul 30, 2005 11:28 pm
Standard rule-of-thumb for nontowered airports:
Enter the downwind at a 45-degree angle to your downwind leg heading (not necessarily midfield but it's best to do that), at the TPA (very very important!!) when you enter. In RL, the TPAs vary, but the 1000AGL/1500AGL rules should do the trick in FS. You can find the airport elevation (above mean sea level) in the info box for the airport in the Map page; just add 1000 or 1500 to that number to determine your TPA for that field.
Most uncontrolled fields use a left-hand pattern; there are some that don't in RL, but no way to tell in FS, except for the obvious stuff like mountains close to the runway on one side, etc.
And yeah, like Boss said, if you're going to come straight-in or some other nonstandard entry or approach, you need to announce it (and keep your eyes peeled!)... but of course this won't work in FS9. It's always safest to fly a standard pattern, and it's good practice for making precise heading changes, etc.
If the tower is conrolling you, all bets are off, except for the TPA (unless they say otherwise). They'll usually tell you to make left turns or right turns, unless they clear you for a straight-in
approach.
As far as the boundary thing goes: I had a different answer, then I looked at the map of that airport. Looks like a bug, or perhaps a small portion of that box goes up to 10,000 but they forgot to add the line. Only way to know for sure is to look at a RL chart of that area.
"Prohibited" airspace means: "Stay the hell out!"Examples: the airspace around Camp David, the White House, etc.
"Restricted" means: "You'd better have a good reason!" Example: the helicopter training area near West Point, south of SWF.
I think in RL there are ways to get permission to enter restricted areas, but I avoid them like the plague- same with Alert, Warning, and MOAs... not worth the risk even with clearance to enter, IMHO... accidents can and do happen in those areas, esp. when you have pilots training in high-speed low-level IFR operations in military aircraft!! Flying a small piston plane in RL, by the time you see that kind of traffic, it'll probably be the very last thing you see...
In some areas this can mean a long detour, though. The Gulf Coast of the US, for example... it's like one enormous MOA. There are lots of small airports down there, though- the local pilots must have to make quite a few phone calls before going on a trip.
But I think in FS9 you just request clearance from the controller as you would for any kind of controlled airspace.
Last edited by
beaky on Wed Aug 24, 2005 4:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.