not everybody is intelligible at an auctioneer's pace, and being understood is more important than being quick (up to a point).
not everybody is intelligible at an auctioneer's pace, and being understood is more important than being quick (up to a point).
So true..![]()
At busy airports, the tower guys HAVE to commmunicate EVERY detail. Those communications are taped and archived. You however, as the pilot, need only acknowledge them. You don't HAVE to read back every instruction (excpet for ground, taxi and ESPECIALLY hold-short instructions). If it's a long-winded, but routine request.. a simple "wilco" will suffice.
Not long ago, I had to deal with a transmision that went something like this:
Tower: Five eight fox-trot, fly a modified base for nine-right, traffic is a Skyhawk on a 3-mile final same runway, report the traffic, expidite the approach, turn final at the numbers, cleared to land, number one, nine-right.
Me: [verbatim read-back that even amazed me, and left my passenger dumbfounded (and he's flown with me quite a bit)]
Obvioulsy that was anything but routine, and a prompt read-back was in order. Not only to make sure we were on the same page, but it helped cement the task in my mind.
Turning final at the numbers in a stiff cross-wind 8-)
One of the strangest requests I ever got, was to do a 360 for spacing,, WHILE I WAS ON SHORT FINAL :o
That was the closest I ever came to saying, "cannot comply".
I'd have rather just gone around, even if it meant getting vectored 5 miles out, to get back in. A climbing turn, initiated at about 500 agl (I could see what the tower guys were wearing), right back into a short final, was something I'm not keen on doing again.
Any tips to become more comfortable with ATC? Thanks
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