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Marly Lite
24th Jan 2021, 04:49
I am a 30 years serving military Pilot.

I am out and about in the UK most days. In 30 years I have had nothing but professional help and service from all ATC units up and down the country. Thank you guys/gals, my job is difficult and there's nothing like the reasssuring voice of somebody at the other end of the airwaves when you need it, especially on a dark horrible night. Thankyou for 30 years of dealing with me.

I was shocked recently to get the brush-off from Bristol on a poor weather day when i was transiting down the channel and could have done with a quick climb and transit to the east. I put it down to 'one of those days'.*

But I hear from my colleagues that my experience is now standard and Bristol are behaving like proper jobsworths. Not interested in anything outside of controlled airspace. All you get is "remain clear of controlled airspace and **** OFF"

I find this attitude appalling, especially when there's nobody else out there.

whats going on?? Why behave in such a shoddy manner?

*Im not stupid, he was waiting for me to bell-up. He just couldn't wait to be a obstructionist c##t. I was the only f##ker airborne in southern lockdown UK. What a ****.

jinglejangles
24th Jan 2021, 07:17
Wow. Arrogant much

2 sheds
24th Jan 2021, 07:45
Marly Lite
Why do you not consult NATS, the ANSP at Bristol? You might just find that they have a policy of only providing service within CAS. Your thoroughly offensive remarks do not impress.
2 s

sambatc
24th Jan 2021, 07:48
It could be they are, as a unit, trying to not provide services outside CAS due to workload, staff shortages, or something. Were you requesting a transit or just a service outside? Regardless, there's no excuse for being rude

Bright-Ling
24th Jan 2021, 08:27
Obviously the blanked words were ‘cart’ and ‘fokker.

You would have to be a right pompous C*** and utter t**t to post otherwise.

Bright-Ling
24th Jan 2021, 08:33
Looking at your previous posts, you seem a contented chap/chapess

Anybody out there done this lately? I'm over 4 years into PAS (pilot) and I have had enough. Do I wait for the 5 year PAS point until I PVR, or do I press the button now, and let the 12 month PVR period take me over the 5 years qualifying period for PAS pension credits?

Maybe this is no longer the job for you.

I assume that you haven’t become a civilian pilot because you are considered risky. You may want to read this..... the first line of para 1 could be of interest to you and your colleagues. (Kinda hope that you don’t have to manage a crew)

CAA Guidance on Pilot Care (http://publicapps.caa.co.uk/docs/33/CAP1695%20-%20Pilot%20Support%20Programme_SEP18.pdf)

OvertHawk
24th Jan 2021, 08:35
I am a 30 years serving military Pilot.

I am out and about in the UK most days. In 30 years I have had nothing but professional help and service from all ATC units up and down the country. Thank you guys/gals, my job is difficult and there's nothing like the reasssuring voice of somebody at the other end of the airwaves when you need it, especially on a dark horrible night. Thankyou for 30 years of dealing with me.

I was shocked recently to get the brush-off from Bristol on a poor weather day when i was transiting down the channel and could have done with a quick climb and transit to the east. I put it down to 'one of those days'.*

But I hear from my colleagues that my experience is now standard and Bristol are behaving like proper jobsworths. Not interested in anything outside of controlled airspace. All you get is "remain clear of controlled airspace and **** OFF"

I find this attitude appalling, especially when there's nobody else out there.

whats going on?? Why behave in such a shoddy manner?

*Im not stupid, he was waiting for me to bell-up. He just couldn't wait to be a obstructionist c##t. I was the only f##ker airborne in southern lockdown UK. What a ****.

The initial part of your post was reasonably valid if a little terse. To add that last line utterly wipes out any credibility and guarantees that this thread becomes a discussion about you rather than your "point".

Move along - nothing to see here.

whowhenwhy
24th Jan 2021, 09:15
But the OP does shine a light on a problem that we have in the UK; the availability of surveillance based FIS in class G.

Professor Plum
24th Jan 2021, 09:30
Marly,

wowzers buddy! No need for such strong language.

I’m a military pilot too. Did you phone ATC after landing? Any time I’ve ever had an issue with ATC, that’s what I’ve done, albeit I’ve rarely had an issue. Every time we’ve had a friendly chat, and there's always been more to the situation than meets the eye.

Just purely out of interest, outside of controlled airspace, was there a problem speaking to Cardiff, as Cardiff is the LARS provider for that area?

Also, a thank you from me to all the controllers out there too.

chevvron
24th Jan 2021, 09:57
I am a 30 years serving military Pilot.

I am out and about in the UK most days. In 30 years I have had nothing but professional help and service from all ATC units up and down the country. Thank you guys/gals, my job is difficult and there's nothing like the reasssuring voice of somebody at the other end of the airwaves when you need it, especially on a dark horrible night. Thankyou for 30 years of dealing with me.


What time on a 'dark and horrible night'?
NOTAM C0526 says airport (and presumably ATC) closed 2359 to 0600 from 15 until 25 Jan at 0559.
Or maybe their primary radar was 'off' for some reason; most airfields can only operate 'SSR only' to clear arrivals ie no transits then that's it.

chevvron
24th Jan 2021, 09:59
Marly Lite
Why do you not consult NATS, the ANSP at Bristol? You might just find that they have a policy of only providing service within CAS. Your thoroughly offensive remarks do not impress.
2 s
Quite possible since they stopped providing LARS.
OK I've been retired for a number of years now and I know some units tend to 'jump' on controllers who 'bend' the rules on safety grounds but a bloke calling up for radar service in sh1tty weather outside my 'official' area of responsibility would never stop me invoking a certain sentence in MATS Part 1 and helping if I could.

Douglas Bahada
24th Jan 2021, 10:30
I tend to agree with Marly Lite. Bristol ATC can be difficult. Most "based" pilots are aware of those who are less than helpful and the service varies depending who is on duty. However ATC provide a champagne service in comparison to the yokels who provide ground security. I will quite happily never operate out of Bristol again. Provincial.

OvertHawk
24th Jan 2021, 10:57
I tend to agree with Marly Lite. Bristol ATC can be difficult. Most "based" pilots are aware of those who are less than helpful and the service varies depending who is on duty. However ATC provide a champagne service in comparison to the yokels who provide ground security. I will quite happily never operate out of Bristol again. Provincial.

I'd tend to agree with him as well that the NATS service from Bristol is not what I'd like it to be. I understand that their priority is to those within their CAS but working more effectively with those outside but near to it would be of benefit to all.

But to close his post with that expletive laden rant is simply unhelpful and smacks of someone who is far to fond of their own voice and entirely uninterested in any perspective other than their own.

Dan Dare
24th Jan 2021, 12:05
Jobsworth: someone who is unlikely to step past some petty rule because “it’s more than my job’s worth”.

In these times it’s hardly surprising that someone in an industry haemorrhaging money wants to keep their job more than they want to provide a service (presumably) outside of the rules. Get the rule changed rather than attacking the player.

chevvron
24th Jan 2021, 12:38
Jobsworth: someone who is unlikely to step past some petty rule because “it’s more than my job’s worth”.

In these times it’s hardly surprising that someone in an industry haemorrhaging money wants to keep their job more than they want to provide a service (presumably) outside of the rules. Get the rule changed rather than attacking the player.
The 'rule change' is already permitted:-(and has been for over 50 years)
MATS Part 1 (CAP 493) Section 1 Chapter 1 para 1.2 second sentence beginning 'However nothing in this manual prevents controllers from using their own discretion and initiative .....'
My favourite bit; I used it many times when providing LARS and was never 'pulled' for doing it like controllers are nowadays.

alfaman
24th Jan 2021, 12:56
The 'rule change' is already permitted:-(and has been for over 50 years)
MATS Part 1 (CAP 493) Section 1 Chapter 1 para 1.2 second sentence beginning 'However nothing in this manual prevents controllers from using their own discretion and initiative .....'
My favourite bit; I used it many times when providing LARS and was never 'pulled' for doing it like controllers are nowadays.
That quote is incomplete - "...in response to unusual circumstances, which may not be covered by the procedures herein." That favoured quote is not permission to break rules which are covered within Mats Part 1, or indeed Part 2 - I've seen people come very unstuck misunderstanding that.

chevvron
24th Jan 2021, 15:11
That quote is incomplete - "...in response to unusual circumstances, which may not be covered by the procedures herein." That favoured quote is not permission to break rules which are covered within Mats Part 1, or indeed Part 2 - I've seen people come very unstuck misunderstanding that.
And 'unusual circumstances' doesn't include an aircraft being stuck at low level in cr@p weather at night asking a radar unit for an IFR climb then?

alfaman
24th Jan 2021, 16:24
And 'unusual circumstances' doesn't include an aircraft being stuck at low level in cr@p weather at night asking a radar unit for an IFR climb then?
Not that unusual, no: & may well be covered in the Bristol Mats Pt 2 for all I know. I could ask any of the people I know who work there, but I wouldn't want to waste their time.

Marly Lite
24th Jan 2021, 17:03
Folks,

Firstly, let me apologise for being so err..., vociferous! (I really am turning into my old man!!)

secondly, thanks for your replies.

I guess what I am really saying is, how is it that the likes of, say, Leeds respond with: good evening C/S XX, here's your squawk here's your airspace crossing you asked for in exchange for a heading or level modification and have a nice night" (or I might help you if I am able...)

and Bristol....literally not even allowed to get a request in. (Don't ask, I'm not going to help).

Is this a shift in attitude; a shift in regulatory framework; or a shift in what is expected of the modern controller?

I could understand it if it was a London-based agency. Never had this before, always got a pleasant reply even if it was: sorry mate too busy today.

alfaman
24th Jan 2021, 19:26
Folks,

Firstly, let me apologise for being so err..., vociferous! (I really am turning into my old man!!)

secondly, thanks for your replies.

I guess what I am really saying is, how is it that the likes of, say, Leeds respond with: good evening C/S XX, here's your squawk here's your airspace crossing you asked for in exchange for a heading or level modification and have a nice night" (or I might help you if I am able...)

and Bristol....literally not even allowed to get a request in. (Don't ask, I'm not going to help).

Is this a shift in attitude; a shift in regulatory framework; or a shift in what is expected of the modern controller?

I could understand it if it was a London-based agency. Never had this before, always got a pleasant reply even if it was: sorry mate too busy today.
:) comes to us all in time. I can't add much detail, but with Leeds & Bristol, you're dealing with different ATC providers: how they operate, within the regulatory framework that everyone operates within, will be set by the airport. The difference could be as simple as the time of day - it might be the person manning the radio in the quiet periods is not licenced to provide the service you're after: that might be because the airport isn't expecting any of their own traffic. My understanding is that Bristol, in particular, has changed it's hours of operation in light of the current situation. It may also be that the unit that seems the most appropriate to the area you're in, may not be the one delegated to deal with traffic in that area. For instance, Farnborough deals with most of the class G traffic in the Luton/Stansted area, not necessarily Luton, Stansted or Essex - so not intuitively who you'd think. Best advice is to give Bristol a ring, normal office hours, then you're more likely to get someone who can help.

BigEndBob
24th Jan 2021, 21:14
Never managed to transit Bristol even before lock down, when the published freq, seems quiet. Always plan to avoid or route Cardiff.

mike current
25th Jan 2021, 09:25
Many ATC instructors have been training students to say "Remain outside controlled airspace" as the first response to an airspace crossing request, instead of a dynamic assessment of the traffic conditions at the time and an appropriate response. You could almost issue a clearance in the time it takes to say it.
It's a school of defensive parrot style brain dead ATC which is more about arse covering than safety. Safety can be equally achieved without having to say NO to every request.
Personally I am not a fan and I still like to offer the best and most flexible type of service available given the circumstances. Luckily as a licence holder we're still allowed a degree of personal choice within the framework of the rules.

I can only think of a couple of UK units (pre COVID) that have genuine traffic reasons to deny airspace crossings all the time. Everywhere else is just laziness or lack of skills/confidence.

2 sheds
25th Jan 2021, 09:45
Well said, Mike.
It's worth quoting the MATS procedure:
"When an aircraft requests permission to enter controlled airspace for the purposes of landing at the associated aerodrome or transiting the airspace, it may not be possible, for traffic reasons, to issue that clearance immediately. In such situations controllers shall advise the pilot to remain outside controlled airspace, when to expect clearance and give a time check"
...which implies at least identifying the aircraft, providing a relevant service initially outside CAS, and informing the pilot of the situation - not an immediate response of "ROCAS."
So where have the instructors (OJTIs) got this idea, if that is correct? Not reading MATS or from NATS?
2 s

escaped.atco
25th Jan 2021, 16:38
Many ATC instructors have been training students to say "Remain outside controlled airspace" as the first response to an airspace crossing request, instead of a dynamic assessment of the traffic conditions at the time and an appropriate response. You could almost issue a clearance in the time it takes to say it.
It's a school of defensive parrot style brain dead ATC which is more about arse covering than safety.............. Everywhere else is just laziness or lack of skills/confidence.
This summarises it nicely. At a previous ANSP I worked for, the emphasis was on defensive controlling techniques. Defensive as in "cover your arse for the purposes of a subsequent investigation" as opposed to any emphasis on dealing with the issue that has been presented to you. As long as an ATCO was correct from a legal angle then their actual lack of skills or appreciation of the problem was deemed largely irrelevant. Welcome to the modern world folks!

HershamBoys
25th Jan 2021, 16:48
Remain outside CAS has been standard in the UK since the 1970s at least, and was introduced because of pilots who believed that the fact that they were talking to the ATC unit believed that they had a right to enter CAS, whether a clearance had been issued or not. This led to as high a number of airspace busts as we have today, and as a defensive measure the phrase was introduced as a barrier. In the old FIR positions, when aircraft requested joining or crossing clearances of airways, a time check was also added, so that if the sector issued a clearance such as 'cross XXX not before TIME' everyone was singing from the same hymn sheet. It is a barrier, just like we use 'after departure' now in amended clearances, rather than 'after take off', because historically aircraft, on hearing an amended clearance phrased in the former manner, lined up without permission. It could be still considered a useful barrier.

HB

Equivocal
25th Jan 2021, 20:43
Many years ago I had the pleasure of working at BRS. At the time the place had a reputation for being unfriendly to GA, in fact there were regular letters in Pilot magazine singling out the unit for its collective attitude. The reputation was well-deserved, with many of the old hands seeing their job as being to protect the local airspace from traffic, especially ‘tiddlers’, that was not inbound or outbound to the airport. Over time, the old guard retired and new blood, who believed in the concept of providing a service to aircraft, came in - and the poor reputation in the eyes of the GA community was, gradually, redeemed. I have no idea what it’s like there nowadays but it is a shame to see what appears to be a poor reputation developing again.

When I was there, it was a great place to do ATC - a great mix of all sorts of aircraft, the CTR/CTA was not connected to the airways system so there was none of this ‘must keep it inside controlled airspace’ malarkey and, for the most part, it was possible to accommodate many of the more conventional requests that pilots made (although, there are one or two requests that stick in my mind and could not be approved). Since then, much has changed, and significantly perhaps, this includes the operator of the unit.

When I started my basic training I can recall being told, during my first few days, that I was privileged to be joining the National Air Traffic Service and that where ever I worked I would be a part of that service. I guess you might call that the ‘Civil Service’ attitude which has become rather outdated in some respects as the years have passed. I’m not really sure how much that view really reflected reality given that there was a very clear State/Non-State distinction made at every turn but when I got out into the real world, in practise, it did not make much difference whether one spoke to a NATS person or one of the others.

At the turn-of-the-century or thereabouts, however, the NATS part of that national service became NATS Ltd (or one of a number of similarly named limited companies), or as some people called them, business entities, or worse, cost centres. What previously had been ATC units became businesses which, amongst other things, had to focus on what it was required to do (because the contract said so) and not to waste money and other resources on things that might be ‘nice to do’ but were not actually required, and more importantly, that the unit was not being paid for.

Maybe what is seen at BRS today is the logical end result of this change.

HershamBoys
26th Jan 2021, 13:05
Spot on. Aviation has grown up and turned into a business. Back in the day we campaigned for 'Public Service, not Private Profit', and the British electorate told us to go away. If I was an ATS Manager at a regional airport, and I walked down the corridor to my Finance and Business Manager and said that I want to staff an ATS service that generated no revenue for the business, once the laughing had stopped, I'd be told to get real. Similarly, my Safety and Compliance Manager would be asking why I am letting VFR GA transits potentially provoke TCAS alerts with our core customers, and their crew reports are automatically forwarded to the SM inbox for investigation. The world has changed.

HB

xtophe80
26th Jan 2021, 14:35
My personal experience last summer on Bristol transit in my glider was better than the previous years.

Marly_lite, if you asked for a transit and were refused, FCS1522: FCS 1521 (caa.co.uk) (https://apply.caa.co.uk/CAAPortal/servlet/SmartForm.html?formCode=fcs1522)

If you feel your safety could have been compromised or might be in similar situation, MOR

chevvron
26th Jan 2021, 14:37
Remain outside CAS has been standard in the UK since the 1970s at least, and was introduced because of pilots who believed that the fact that they were talking to the ATC unit believed that they had a right to enter CAS, whether a clearance had been issued or not. This led to as high a number of airspace busts as we have today, and as a defensive measure the phrase was introduced as a barrier. In the old FIR positions, when aircraft requested joining or crossing clearances of airways, a time check was also added, so that if the sector issued a clearance such as 'cross XXX not before TIME' everyone was singing from the same hymn sheet. It is a barrier, just like we use 'after departure' now in amended clearances, rather than 'after take off', because historically aircraft, on hearing an amended clearance phrased in the former manner, lined up without permission. It could be still considered a useful barrier.

HB
Maybe it stems from the few pilots in the UK who have trained in the USA where if you call an ATC unit for transit and they say 'standby' without adding 'remain outside controlled airspace' you can still enter the CTR.
I only ever noticed one ATC unit, Southampton, who would routinely say 'remain outside controlled airspace' even when accepting a radar handover, but that was before I retired just over 11 years ago for low level traffic; if it was about FL60 or higher they would issue a clearance via the SAM

2 sheds
26th Jan 2021, 15:31
I only ever noticed one ATC unit, Southampton, who would routinely say 'remain outside controlled airspace' even when accepting a radar handover,...
...which makes you wonder - as the transferring controller - does (s)he serioiusly expect me to parrot that to the pilot while changing code and frequency?

2 s

chevvron
27th Jan 2021, 09:24
...which makes you wonder - as the transferring controller - does (s)he serioiusly expect me to parrot that to the pilot while changing code and frequency?

2 s
If we didn't, they would phone us back and moan about it.

alfaman
27th Jan 2021, 10:20
Maybe it stems from the few pilots in the UK who have trained in the USA where if you call an ATC unit for transit and they say 'standby' without adding 'remain outside controlled airspace' you can still enter the CTR.
I only ever noticed one ATC unit, Southampton, who would routinely say 'remain outside controlled airspace' even when accepting a radar handover, but that was before I retired just over 11 years ago for low level traffic; if it was about FL60 or higher they would issue a clearance via the SAM
Not just UK pilots trained in the States, continental light aircraft struggled with the concept too. Luton in the '80s & '90s, remain outside was used regularly, whether a handover or a freecall: at times the airspace was already approaching capacity, no way you'd want someone barging through without being 100% sure you knew what they were doing. Never had a complaint from aircraft or the transferring agency, either: if they grumbled in the cockpit, they kept it to themselves, I imagine. They rarely actually suffered any delay, it was more an insurance against infringement issues, since the airspace constraints meant most clearances were tactical, rather than procedural. Paperwork only triggered if there was a problem, which zone infringements absolutely were, & I imagine, still are.. No idea what the situation is since Farnborough picked up the baton.

sambatc
27th Jan 2021, 11:44
If we didn't, they would phone us back and moan about it.

How would they know?

SpeedyCreek
27th Jan 2021, 13:05
There's at least one civil LARS unit in middle of England which routinely says "remain outside controlled airspace" during radar hangovers and pre-notes almost every single time. They do generally accommodate transits though.

My interactions with Bristol are limited but not so long ago I was working a helicopter based just north of Bristol (PlodCopter). I phoned Bristol to pass details when Plod was on the way home, only to be told "they don't normally talk to us." I told the pilot that Bristol didn't want a handover, and he said "yeah, we don't get along."

chevvron
28th Jan 2021, 08:19
during radar hangovers and pre-notes .

I wonder where that is?

SpeedyCreek
28th Jan 2021, 10:23
radar hangover?

Please excuse autocorrect for knowing me too well.

Marly Lite
31st Jan 2021, 01:49
Great chat guys/gals.

I completely understand the initial "remain clear of controlled airspace" phrase on an initial call. Its effectively a plea to not do anything silly until i have capacity to deal with you...

My only ask is that ATCers give me an actual chance to express a request. I ALWAYS have fuel to go around airspace, but purrlease at least allow me to ASK for a crossing or smillar. I might only want to chamfer the corner off!

2 sheds
31st Jan 2021, 08:40
Marley Lite
"Remain outside...", I hope, as the standard terminology, but a valid and practical point, not understood by some!
2 s

chevvron
31st Jan 2021, 12:39
There was a case many years ago (late '70s I think) of a Navajo departing Gatwick VFR. He was assigned a heading (about 020 deg I think though I may be wrong) to leave the CTR to the north then he was (apparently) forgotten, so after leaving the Gatwick CTR, he entered the Heathrow CTR still on an assigned heading.
Gatwick did not at that time, have their CTR boundary marked on their video maps.
As far as I recall, it was decided that it was the pilot's fault; he should have known where he was and requested clearance to enter the Heathrow CTR.

2 sheds
31st Jan 2021, 13:06
There was a case many years ago (late '70s I think) of a Navajo departing Gatwick VFR. He was assigned a heading (about 020 deg I think though I may be wrong) to leave the CTR to the north then he was (apparently) forgotten, so after leaving the Gatwick CTR, he entered the Heathrow CTR still on an assigned heading.
Gatwick did not at that time, have their CTR boundary marked on their video maps.
As far as I recall, it was decided that it was the pilot's fault; he should have known where he was and requested clearance to enter the Heathrow CTR.

And the point is...? "ROCAS" should never be required?

2 s

Doody2007
2nd Feb 2021, 11:56
"ROCAS" shouldn't be required. I agree.

However there are the minority of pilots that spoil it for everyone else.

I recall a few years back an aircraft was freecalled across to us from an adjacent unit. ATCO was busy at the time and eventually invited the pilot to pass their message around 90 seconds after they first called. The pilot passed their routing, straight through the CTA VOR DCT VOR, didn't request CAS transit. When the assigned squawk was displayed, low and behold the aircraft is 3nms inside CAS without a clearance.

When this was pointed out to the pilot, the reply was, "well I'm IFR, I've filed a flight plan and I called whilst outside CAS".

So I think you will have to forgive those of us that make use of the term "remain outside CAS". I don't use it routinely, but if a pilot requests zone transit I will use the term until I've established the requested routing and identified the aircraft.

2 sheds
2nd Feb 2021, 18:38
So I think you will have to forgive those of us that make use of the term "remain outside CAS". I don't use it routinely, but if a pilot requests zone transit I will use the term until I've established the requested routing and identified the aircraft.

In the time taken to say that, you could identify the aircraft and ascertain whether you needed to specify ROCAS - or perhaps even issue a prompt clearance!

2 s

sambatc
2nd Feb 2021, 19:22
In the time taken to say that, you could identify the aircraft and ascertain whether you needed to specify ROCAS - or perhaps even issue a prompt clearance!

2 s

You can identify an aircraft, get their details, and issue a safe clearance in 8 syllables in one transmission? Impressive.

there are times when ROCAS is very useful, and times when it's not needed..it's not as simple as either being needed all the time or none of the time

Doody2007
3rd Feb 2021, 01:40
In the time taken to say that, you could identify the aircraft and ascertain whether you needed to specify ROCAS - or perhaps even issue a prompt clearance!

2 s

Ok then. 🙄

mike current
3rd Feb 2021, 06:50
You can identify an aircraft, get their details, and issue a safe clearance in 8 syllables in one transmission? Impressive.

I work with people that still can't enter the details of a freecaller straight into EFPS.. always have to grab a pen and a piece of paper, write it all down and then enter it on EFPS at the next available opportunity... 10+ years after we got rid of paper strips.

AyrTC
3rd Feb 2021, 07:06
Maybe NATS should have insisted that all that EFPS displays had a scribble function. At PC it was a lifesaver for free calls ( at least it was six years ago before I retired ) I always thought that this was a basic function which all ATCO’s needed. Progress?
Rgds
AyrTC

Jim59
3rd Feb 2021, 10:08
I'm a GA pilot. NATS implemented an optional online systen that covered at least Luton & Stansted whereby one could pre-notify an intention to route into the Class D airspace either for transit or to a destination inside the zone. It was great. You called, the controller replied that he/she had your details and thereafter the amount of RT traffic was minimal. Regrettably my understanding is that is has been discontinued. Would wider use of such a system help manage itinerant traffic?

spekesoftly
3rd Feb 2021, 10:43
Interesting video about Edinburgh ATC in the link below. Starting at about 4:40 it shows how they integrate VFRs using their EFPS displays and the advantage of a pre-note to both ATC and GA pilots.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5SYQu5AGuk&feature=emb_logo

AyrTC
3rd Feb 2021, 11:54
Funnily enough Spekesoftly I tried putting that up about an hour ago ( great minds think alike ) and it just disappeared. The video is very well done. The info about the electronic strips starts around 2:00 mins. Edinburgh is no longer operated by NATS 🙁 However it is the equipment that NATS installed. I would imagine Bristol Ops is similar ( I have no idea! )
Rgds
AyrTC

jmmoric
3rd Feb 2021, 12:02
...

The airport could continue renting the equipment from NATS, or they outright bought it. The equipment does not have to come from the ANSP, the ANSP could only provide the manpower.

AyrTC
3rd Feb 2021, 12:22
jmmoric that’s understood. I was just trying to clarify that although Edinburgh and Bristol are different ANSP’s they are probably using the same basic equipment as the new ANSP at Edinburgh “inherited” the equipment NATS installed. I am certainly not trying to start an ANSP war!😎
Rgds
AyrTC

Gonzo
3rd Feb 2021, 20:48
I stand to be corrected, but the Bristol electronic strip system is what's called 'Hub and Spoke', and bears more similarities to TC EXCDS than to the EFPS systems used in Edinburgh (and Stansted, Heathrow etc.)

ex82watcher
5th Feb 2021, 17:45
I work with people that still can't enter the details of a freecaller straight into EFPS.. always have to grab a pen and a piece of paper, write it all down and then enter it on EFPS at the next available opportunity... 10+ years after we got rid of paper strips.
Having worked only in area radar,we used to get very few 'free-callers',but it still happened occasionally,and I always kept a blank strip handy for such events.Of course at Eastern Radar,we would just write on the screen in chinagraph.Never had to use EFPS,thank god.

Buster the Bear
7th Feb 2021, 20:49
Are Bristol combining the tower and radar functions at times. Farnborough have been doing. Might account for a reduced service, but if the frequency is quiet, ask in a polite manner why your request is being denied?

chevvron
8th Feb 2021, 08:42
Are Bristol combining the tower and radar functions at times. Farnborough have been doing. Might account for a reduced service, but if the frequency is quiet, ask in a polite manner why your request is being denied?
Farnborough and some other airfields were allowed to do it but only in 'light traffic' conditions (before 8 am and after 8pm at Farnborough I think but I may be wrong) and of course, the tower controller had to have a valid APS rating as well as ADI/ADV, the ATM had to be suitable for identifying the aircraft and vectoring it onto the ILS and of course, the procedures and safety case had to be vetted and approved by the CAA.
Happened after I retired; in my day the use of 'surveillance equipment' to provide APS by the tower controller was strictly verboten.

blind pew
8th Feb 2021, 10:04
Heathrow mid 70s..followed a T3 in on westerlies. co pilot whinged that the distance to go informed by the approach controller was some minor distance out compared with his doppler driven distance counter..thought idiot as obviously had never visited the tower to see how the guys and girls worked. A month or so later he was found hanging in his garage.

mike current
8th Feb 2021, 11:27
Combined radar and tower function has been in use at several UK airports pretty much 24/7 since March 2020.

chevvron
13th Mar 2021, 08:02
Heathrow mid 70s..followed a T3 in on westerlies. co pilot whinged that the distance to go informed by the approach controller was some minor distance out compared with his doppler driven distance counter..thought idiot as obviously had never visited the tower to see how the guys and girls worked. A month or so later he was found hanging in his garage.
I did a talkdown to touchdown using PAR one day and the pilot complained there was a least half a second between me saying 'radar touchdown NOW' and his wheels actually making contact.