Echo Tango wrote:
"XXX approach, experimental 123, 20 north, request flight following Bravo India Victor."
radfordc wrote:One question...why do controllers talk so fast! I understand needing to keep the freq open but it's to the point I can only understand about half what I'm hearing.
Mike53 wrote:
Back in the mid-'80s, Piedmont Airlines began flying out of Worcester airport (ORH) in Massachusetts to Baltimore/Washington International airport (BWI). A flight crew requested their IFR clearance, and I dutifully rattled it off to them in typical New England air traffic control fashion. As I concluded, the response I received in a thick Southern drawl was priceless:
Airplane 1234:
"Woostasure clearance
chris wrote:Echo Tango wrote:
"XXX approach, experimental 123, 20 north, request flight following Bravo India Victor."
Flight following question. I've heard some people suggest just saying "XXX approach, experimental 123, VFR request" for the initial contact before going on with the flight following request in case the controller is busy. What do you think of that?
It looks like what you said would be much quicker or the same time even if you have to repeat it once.
Echo Tango wrote:Absolutely. If we're busy, that's all we need to know. Just make sure you're not about to fly into class C/D/B before we get back to you. The other stuff is just controller preference. Your mileage will vary. I PREFER to know distance and direction from an airport/navaid and where you're going, because I can usually look up, see your "V" before I give you a code, formulate a plan, and then Radar ID you. But like I said, that's preference. Both ways are 100% correct. The issues arise when the transmissions become 30 seconds long and the information is incomplete. Keep it around 5 seconds, and nobody will bat an eye. In fact, you'll probably get excellent service as a result because we'll know we won't have to hold your hand.
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