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Deadside or Upwind?
Evening All
When joining the circuit for the active runway to land, and approaching from non-active side of the pattern that is deadside why should we call this Upwind as when departing the active runway for a circuit or departing the field this is called Upwind? |
Glider 90 - I am not quite certain from your phrasing the precise point that you are querying, but the following may be relevant, certainly in the UK. The standard circuit terminology is published in CAP 413 (UK), which is derived from ICAO PANS-ATM. Each is a masterpiece of inadequate terminology insofar as no designations are given to the first two legs of a circuit immediately after departure. Common practice in ATC training is to use the terms "climb-out" and "crosswind" respectively and but there is no formal authority for this. Also, CAP 413 uses the dreadful expression (in the text) of "upwind threshold" instead of "end" - a runway direction has one threshold and one end! Hence, there can be no precise meaning for the term upwind, rather that it is a general term indicating that area relative to the runway-in-use. CAP 413 adds to the confusion by giving an example of traffic information being passed as G-CD, traffic is a Cherokee upwind and a Tomahawk late downwind. Perhaps this is what you are querying. In this case, where is the pilot supposed to look for the Cherokee - on climb-out, crosswind or even at the start of the downwind leg before reaching the downwind report position? I have drawn this anomaly to the attention of CAA but am not holding my breath.
2 s |
CAP 413 adds to the confusion by giving an example of traffic information being passed as G-CD, traffic is a Cherokee upwind and a Tomahawk late downwind. Perhaps this is what you are querying. In this case, where is the pilot supposed to look for the Tomahawk - on climb-out, crosswind or even at the start of the downwind leg before reaching the downwind report position? I have drawn this anomaly to the attention of CAA but am not holding my breath. When joining the circuit for the active runway to land, and approaching from non-active side of the pattern that is deadside why should we call this Upwind as when departing the active runway for a circuit or departing the field this is called Upwind? This diagram describes what you learn in the UK (from CAP413): https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....9bca97179b.jpg This diagram describes what you learn in Canada or the United States (from the FAA Aeronautical Information Manual as obtained from Air Facts with a notation from me about the wind direction): https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....6ebba20ec1.png So, depending on where you are geographical, either of the terms is correct. In almost 20 years flying, I've found our beloved industry is notorious for people sharing and teaching their opinion of how things should be, rather than how they are. In this case, both terms are correct for different situations. Dead Side is not appropriate in Canada or the U.S, whereas upwind (or non-traffic side) is. Likewise, Upwind is not appropriate in the UK as Deadside is used to describe the same position. It's akin to calling the landing gear the undercarriage. Some will pick a hill to die on over that debate! :) It is simply a lack of knowledge, sometimes bordering on laxity, that comes from exposure; that is, most flight instructors train just in their jurisdiction so only know what they've been taught. Then, they get a student who either learned it a different way or is reading from a book published elsewhere, and that instructor will tell the student they are flat out wrong. The student is not wrong, given the proper context. And a fact without context is just a belief. |
+TSRA
You have answered my question with the UK have different terms for been in the circuit, compared to Canada & USA. Why don't they just make everything standard across the globe and this would erase any confusion!! |
+TSRA
Cheers 2 s |
Originally Posted by 2 sheds
(Post 10412783)
+TSR
Cheers 2 s |
Course if everybody phoned for PPR and briefing.......... 2 s |
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