aah right... so its not like 'with golf' means 'you have 5 tonnes of plastic explodes on board' or anything like that
so its just to keep you updated.
In this case it means the ATIS information.
The ATIS information updates every hour I believe and is tied to Zulu time...
...It's just letting the controller know you have the latest airport information which can include anything from weather information, to closed runways/taxiways and notices of people on the airfield or inactive ILS'.
aah right... so its not like 'with golf' means 'you have 5 tonnes of plastic explodes on board' or anything like that
so its just to keep you updated.
No,no,no that would be: with Tango November Tango 5 Tango
In this case it means the ATIS information.
The ATIS information updates every hour I believe and is tied to Zulu time...
...It's just letting the controller know you have the latest airport information which can include anything from weather information, to closed runways/taxiways and notices of people on the airfield or inactive ILS'.
An ATIS can last several hours without changing on some days. They will change when there is a significant change - but sometimes vis, cloud, temp and pressure can remain almost unchanged for a long period.
As for the letter, when the airfield opens it'll be "alpha", and will go on until the airfield closes. If they get to "Zulu", it'll revert back to "Alpha"...
As Brett says, when you make initial contact with an airfield frequency, you add to the end of the call the ATIS code letter and pressure setting (QFE, QNH as required) you have copied...
how do you mean 'pressure setting'? where and what would that be? (or is it down to atmospherics?)
how do you mean 'pressure setting'? where and what would that be? (or is it down to atmospherics?)
That's the local barometric reading... flight crews set their altimeter to that value so that it will read correctly. Very important for clearing obstacles and being at the altitude assigned to you by ATC.
how do you mean 'pressure setting'? where and what would that be? (or is it down to atmospherics?)
That's the local barometric reading... flight crews set their altimeter to that value so that it will read correctly. Very important for clearing obstacles and being at the altitude assigned to you by ATC.
is that similar or different to setting your altimiter to ground/sea level depending on your distance of flight? and would the ATC just tell you the pressure when you check in for taxiing to runway?
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