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What radar service do you require?

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What radar service do you require?

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Old 5th Sep 2012, 22:30
  #21 (permalink)  
 
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it was quite odd to me to be flying in UK with radar coverage and be offered a "choice" of different services. As I said earlier, I would want the a service that prevents me crashing into other planes - why would I want anything less?
Quite right! But the CAA clearly isn't bright enough to figure this one out.

Every pilot who's flown there asks me what they should get.

I say to them in layman's terms:

Basic Service = Useless service. Only used by newbie pilots and controllers to tie up the radio waves and collect everyone's flight details on a strip which eventually gets trashed. Typically you get nothing useful out of this service, but if you are lucky you may receive some limited traffic info. You might as well just listen in to the frequency and cut the babble.

Traffic Service = Tells you about some traffic around you, half of these are too far away and you may never see it. There are also others you may see but you ain't alerted because it is outside radar range or the controller is too busy to tell you about it. You get downgraded to a pseudo Useless Service when there's too much traffic around you.

Deconfliction Service = Tries to prevent you from crashing into other planes. The service everyone really wants but nobody gets. Why? Because the traffic around you is almost always too dense to achieve their huge 5nm/3000ft deconfiction minima. The end result? You get a Useless Service.

Procedural Service = Like a Deconfliction Service with a heads up that ATC has no radar. Clearly someone hasn't grasped what it means when the term "radar contact" is not used, so they invented this whole new service just for this.

There is only one service recognized internationally that combines the best elements of all the above and cuts out all the trash.

Believe it or not, it is called .... Flight Information Service!

Last edited by soaringhigh650; 5th Sep 2012 at 22:42.
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Old 6th Sep 2012, 07:06
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The old Flight Information Service was a Basic Service in the UK.We used to have Radar Information,and Radar Advisory which are now Traffic and Deconfliction.
I'm curious about your interpretation of Procedural Service.At our unit you do get these,and it's because there is no radar controller.Often the person providing the service doesn't have a radar rating.
I believe that the ATSOCAS were aligned to the military hymn sheet,so your saying that it's all useless.
Look forward to offering a Useless service but downgraded to Hopeless,or just Cp ,next time your inbound to Bonny Scatland.
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Old 6th Sep 2012, 18:49
  #23 (permalink)  
 
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IDENTIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
d) RADAR CONTACT [position];
e) IDENTIFIED [position];
Options of phraseology from PANS-ATM. Nothing to do with being "positively controlled" (whatever that is), but the identification process.. Whether an aircraft is being controlled or not depends on the class of airspace.

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Old 6th Sep 2012, 21:16
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Terms of service should be stated clearly and acknowledged
Elsewhere in the world they are clearly stated in AIP - and you don't need 15 levels of service in class G.

Last edited by topdrop; 6th Sep 2012 at 21:17.
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Old 7th Sep 2012, 07:50
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Elsewhere in the world they are clearly stated in AIP - and you don't need 15 levels of service in class G.
Erm, I make it four. One allows total autonomy, one points out traffic, one avoids traffic and the last accounts for areas without radar coverage. I really don't see the issue, unless your training is so poor that you don't understand it.

The other end of the scale is a system where I impose a certain service on you. the problem with this is what level should I provide? Control everyone as if they are VMC (I doubt the airlines will be happy with that) or as if they are IMC (most PPLs won't be happy with that)? Hence, as is appropriate, you are allowed to choose what you want.

For my benefit, could someone explain exactly what the problem with this choice is?
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Old 7th Sep 2012, 11:38
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the problem with this is what level should I provide?
Control everyone as if they are VMC (I doubt the airlines will be happy with that) or as if they are IMC (most PPLs won't be happy with that)?
Hence, as is appropriate, you are allowed to choose what you want.
The rest of the world seems to operate like this:

      For my benefit, could someone explain exactly what the problem with this choice is? I really don't see the issue, unless your training is so poor that you don't understand it.
      It is out of line with international practice. The rest of the world does not need it. It has never heard of it, and probably never will.

      Last edited by soaringhigh650; 7th Sep 2012 at 11:43.
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      Old 7th Sep 2012, 11:58
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      For my benefit, could someone explain exactly what the problem with this choice is?
      Because unless you have a yellow peril and also a poo brown/blue/green cover book and are operating in the area that you provide a service in. You won't have a clue what to expect in the air. The variation in service provision is huge between units and mostly is directly linked to how much you pay in landing fee's.

      ATSOCA isn't fit for purpose. It ignores flight rules, forgien pilots and alot of commercial pilots that normally operate in CAS don't have a clue how it works. And the pilots that do know how it all works employ ways and means to circumvent the spirit of the service that it was designed to allow because they don't want to be controlled in class G. Why should they burn extra fuel so a loco gets less track miles?
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      Old 7th Sep 2012, 15:14
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      Those pilots from Forg can be a pain
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      Old 7th Sep 2012, 15:23
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      regardless of the opinion, the fact that the "new" ATSOCAS are still being discussed in this manner after 3 and a half years from introduction, perhaps says a lot..
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      Old 7th Sep 2012, 22:33
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      Aye they are

      And so are like me who can't be bothered with it and have got fed up and can't be bothered with the arguments about refusing coordination so don't take any service at all and remain unkown traffic. And to be completely honest I haven't really noticed the difference between having a service and not having one apart from a distinct lack of around being over controlled.

      Basic they will only speak to you if the want to move you and they won't give you a traffic service because of controller work load, and you won;t get a deconfliction unless you paying a landing fee. Might as well not bother and keep 121.5 on and look out the window and save 40 quid in fuel in a SEP and 400 quid if flying the TP. TP we pay airways charges anyway if we are VFR and we still don't get a traffic service until the controller spots we are doing 220knts and themselves when a warner goes off.
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      Old 7th Sep 2012, 22:50
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      Originally Posted by mad_jock
      And so are like me who can't be bothered with it and have got fed up and can't be bothered with the arguments about refusing coordination so don't take any service at all and remain unkown traffic. And to be completely honest I haven't really noticed the difference between having a service and not having one apart from a distinct lack of around being over controlled.

      Basic they will only speak to you if the want to move you and they won't give you a traffic service because of controller work load, and you won;t get a deconfliction unless you paying a landing fee. Might as well not bother and keep 121.5 on and look out the window and save 40 quid in fuel in a SEP
      Eloquently put. You haved saved me the job. Thank goodness I am not alone.

      What is the point of having CAP774 if service providers are not going to comply with it...
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      Old 8th Sep 2012, 06:06
        #32 (permalink)  
       
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      Basic they will only speak to you if the want to move you and they won't give you a traffic service because of controller work load, and you won;t get a deconfliction unless you paying a landing fee. Might as well not bother and keep 121.5 on and look out the window and save 40 quid in fuel in a SEP and 400 quid if flying the TP.
      If this is the way it is working for you, then I understand and even sympathise with your problem. I don't believe this is how it is supposed to work - if you're getting this regularly from notified LARS units then you need to MOR it, as they are getting paid to provide ATSOCAS. I'm in the lucky position of having a well staffed unit with controllers more than happy to provide a service to whoever wants it, regardless. The only time you wouldn't get traffic/deconflition is if you're not in radar cover, which is fair enough. In the case of high workload, most would say "traffic service, reduced/late warning of traffic due controller workload" so you'll still get some traffic information which you wouldn't with a basic. I think this might go some way to explaining why I like the system - you tell me what you want and I give it to you. The basic premise of that is good, you must agree.
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      Old 8th Sep 2012, 08:30
        #33 (permalink)  
       
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      I'm quite happy to provide Traffic and Deconfliction services when requested. And I don't even work in a LARS unit.

      95% of our VFR traffic, however, requests a basic service.

      Last edited by Glamdring; 8th Sep 2012 at 08:31.
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      Old 8th Sep 2012, 09:15
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      Its normally regional airport/mil approach controllers who are the worst for it. But there is such huge variations you can never tell what your going to get. It even changes between ATCO's on the same unit.

      I don't think its the way it should work either. Nobody would design it the way its being done just now.

      But there was a major flaw built into the system when there was no link to flight rules. Which are pretty standard world wide with only the numbers for viz and distance from clouds changing locally for VFR. And its pretty solid in a pilots head which one they are operating under.

      When the seperation is more stringent than operating in CAS there is something wrong. Change the deconfliction seperation for all traffic to unknown/IFR and pass traffic info to known VFR. Instead of the current situation of VFR being seperated by 3/5miles on traffic they can see.

      Then there is the names of the services, they are so far away from anywhere else nobody who hasn't flown extensively in the UK won't have a clue what they are and opt for the one they do understand which is usually basic.

      How about

      Flight information service
      Radar information Service
      Radar control service.

      You need to have radar somewhere in the names for the radar services and the "I am speaking to you just in case I need to pass a mayday but don't actually expect anything and also want to do the nice thing so I am known traffic" Is pretty globally known as flight infomation service. And something which denotes you are being vectored/controlled on the top level service. Information always means you have to deal with the information and decide your own actions. Radar Seperation Service might work for the top level.

      You can get fancy with english if you like with the names but it will just wash over the heads of any ICAO 4 english speakers like the Taffs and Jocks

      Procedural needs looked at so that IFR flights get given a procedural service as standard and arn't asked what type of service they require. Then the current situation of folk getting passed traffic in IMC of whats on the procedure on a basic service doesn't happen. Hopefully this will stop the situation of two aircraft on the procedure with one of them not controlled and in alot of cases don't even realise they are not being controlled and its up to them to seperate themselves. If they can see the airport they will ask for a visual.
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      Old 8th Sep 2012, 11:51
        #35 (permalink)  
       
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      Flight information service. Radar information Service. Radar control service. You need to have radar somewhere in the names for the radar
      services.
      Not really. You are still making a meal out of the different service types.
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      Old 22nd Jul 2022, 04:56
        #36 (permalink)  
       
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      ATC Services

      This used to be easy to answer ATC Services … what’s changed?
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      Old 22nd Jul 2022, 07:04
        #37 (permalink)  
       
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      Chopper
      That is years out of date!
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      Old 22nd Jul 2022, 09:48
        #38 (permalink)  
       
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      Originally Posted by chopper2
      This used to be easy to answer ATC Services … what’s changed?
      The list shown is pre 2007; the names of the service changed in 2009 and in addition, Manston, Cottesmore, Coltishall and Bristol Filton no longer exist, Bristol withdrew from LARS and Farnborough operates 3 sectors with separate frequencies instead of just one.
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      Old 22nd Jul 2022, 11:30
        #39 (permalink)  
       
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      Originally Posted by chopper2
      … what’s changed?
      Just about everything!
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      Old 22nd Jul 2022, 14:23
        #40 (permalink)  

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      Surely it’s just a matter of reading up and understanding the current rules and regulations….

      Reminds me of the awfully well spoken pilot I overheard flying north near Saltby glider site trying to gain “permission” to enter the Yorkshire AAIA.
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