Shoreham Incident.
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Ditto what IO540 said.
In fact the OHJ requires more faffing around in the circuit and more risk of collision (in this incident, an OHJ would have done nothing to avert the risk by all accounts). At least if you join on say base leg, you can get a picture in your mind of the traffic and there should be only two directions traffic will be approaching from, downwind or final (for someone on a straight in).
Approaching from the deadside then the crosswind join (as in over the numbers) is the most expident way to join. You can also modify your flight path to the left or right to fit in behind someone else in the circuit quite easily.
We fly extremely tight circuits where I am based due to noise abaitment.
Anyway, a sad day and a sad needless loss of life.
In fact the OHJ requires more faffing around in the circuit and more risk of collision (in this incident, an OHJ would have done nothing to avert the risk by all accounts). At least if you join on say base leg, you can get a picture in your mind of the traffic and there should be only two directions traffic will be approaching from, downwind or final (for someone on a straight in).
Approaching from the deadside then the crosswind join (as in over the numbers) is the most expident way to join. You can also modify your flight path to the left or right to fit in behind someone else in the circuit quite easily.
We fly extremely tight circuits where I am based due to noise abaitment.
Anyway, a sad day and a sad needless loss of life.
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Agreed but the incident I refer to occurred where no ATC was present.
Avoid imitations
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Also agreed. Obviously sensible use, for essential flight safety purposes, only.
Not idle chatter, which sometimes happens at an airfield near me.
I've even heard pilots order lunch from the circuit.
Not idle chatter, which sometimes happens at an airfield near me.
I've even heard pilots order lunch from the circuit.
Many pundits on this thread proclaim why they don't wish to use a 'standard' join and proceed to explain their own home brewed variation.
Apparently they know better what's good for themselves and don't really care about everyone else !
e.g. I can't understand the advocation of joining on base, sounds highly hazardous.
If nothing else it demonstrates that if such (experienced ?) pilots do their own thing, circuits for others in their vicinity is made more hazardous.
The OHJ is a procedure whereby one has a good idea of where other a/c should be and whilst one may be- if non radio - unaware of unheard traffic, it does allow time for good look at what's happening below BEFORE the alternative suggestions of suddenly appearing on cross wind or some other self appointed random position.
If willy nilly one breaks the pattern - without asking ATC's permission (& so others on frequency can hear the exchange) then perhaps certain old bold pilots could do with some circuit retraining !
Apparently they know better what's good for themselves and don't really care about everyone else !
e.g. I can't understand the advocation of joining on base, sounds highly hazardous.
If nothing else it demonstrates that if such (experienced ?) pilots do their own thing, circuits for others in their vicinity is made more hazardous.
The OHJ is a procedure whereby one has a good idea of where other a/c should be and whilst one may be- if non radio - unaware of unheard traffic, it does allow time for good look at what's happening below BEFORE the alternative suggestions of suddenly appearing on cross wind or some other self appointed random position.
If willy nilly one breaks the pattern - without asking ATC's permission (& so others on frequency can hear the exchange) then perhaps certain old bold pilots could do with some circuit retraining !
One of the fundamental points is to make sure you're in level flight at the circuit height before entering the live part of the circuit - applies whether it's an OHJ or "commercial" join.
To not do so is to risk descending on top of an a/c which is already established in the circuit.
Also, how do you lookout? Is this taught?
To not do so is to risk descending on top of an a/c which is already established in the circuit.
Also, how do you lookout? Is this taught?
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What I dislike about the OHJ in a low winged aircraft is that you're circling with your underbelly to traffic that may be arriving in the overhead from any direction. The combination of that blindspot with the natural inclination of new arrivals to be looking down to orientate themselves with the runway and trying to spot what's already in the pattern is not good.
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What I dislike about the OHJ in a low winged aircraft is that you're circling with your underbelly to traffic that may be arriving in the overhead from any direction
Sure, two aircraft may arive in the overhead at the same time from different directions but then radio should avoid that being a problem and one wont be below you. Is there any difference between that and one aircraft joining crosswind and another downwind at the same time? The key in all these situations is to know what other aircraft are doing.
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e.g. I can't understand the advocation of joining on base, sounds highly hazardous.
If nothing else it demonstrates that if such (experienced ?) pilots do their own thing, circuits for others in their vicinity is made more hazardous.
If nothing else it demonstrates that if such (experienced ?) pilots do their own thing, circuits for others in their vicinity is made more hazardous.
When flying overhead, you are essentially head to head with anyone completing the decent deadside and crossing the upwind numbers. Albeit at 1000' supposedly, but you know how some people fly, "nearly 1000'" or "nearly over the upwind numbers. At a shortish runway, say 700m, this puts you a maximum of 700m lateral separation if you cross overhead the downwind numbers.
However, some people descend pretty quick and tight to the runway, other people fly miles out and turn. This puts the opposing traffic in a blind spot (i.e. below your cowl), while you are turning and descending. Very dangerous if you don't have a big picture of what is going on. Especially as you are now all aiming for the same spot - the upwind numbers.
Next you cross over the upwind numbers and you have to look out for people above you opposite direction joining OH, people descending deadside either inside you (if they fly a tight circuit) or coming in close behind and people in the circuit coming from the right (in a LH circuit). Apparently you might also have to look out for people coming up from below too. Once in the circuit you have to contend with people joining on base and final, so your head really has to be moving around.
Now throw into that equation a Thruster microlight, an RV6, a TBM700 and a Cessna 152, all with vastly different performance.
If everyone joined on something like the US 45° join, then faster aeroplanes can overtake safely, of slower aeroplanes can adjust to pop in behind someone in the circuit. I joined on base the other day in front of a motor glider on downwind. By the time I had landed and taxied clear of the runway, he was turning final. If I had joined OH I'd have come in behind him, then had to fly a really wide circuit so I didn't ram him up the backside and I'd have probably ended up outside the ATZ. Joining base, I could see up downwind, and I could see final was clear....much more sensible if you ask me.
Also note that at many airfields, OHJs are prohibited due to parachuting, military airspace, shared ATZs etc....
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Originally Posted by Justicair
I don't see why you should be circling overhead arriving traffic
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You should not be flying such a large angle of bank in the OHJ. Maybe 5 degrees max.
But it is a bad system anyway, for reasons already posted, plus also the case of planes with different speeds.
But it is a bad system anyway, for reasons already posted, plus also the case of planes with different speeds.
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until you are either given permission to descend to circuit height
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One of those MD500's could depart on the runway heading, manage a climb better than the RV-X, and probably be even harder to see while doing it. Would the MD500 pilot be wrong to accomplish a maximum performance climb on the runway axis? Is there a limiting procedure for this? I've never seen one.
EGKB AD 2.22 — FLIGHT PROCEDURES
1. Circuit Procedures
a. Aircraft taking off, 'going around' or making 'touch and go' landings are to remain at or below 500 ft QFE until the upwind end of the runway in use has been passed, when a left or right turn (as appropriate) should be initiated. Aircraft joining or re-joining the circuit for landing are to fly across the upwind end of the runway in use at 1000 ft QFE at 90° to the runway heading, a left or right turn (as appropriate) should be made onto the downwind leg.
I agree though that circling in the overhead with other aircraft arriving has potential for something nasty to happen.
Would be interesting to see the stats for midairs/air proxes in the overhead as opposed to in the circuit/at circuit height - I would suggest the latter figures would be much higher.
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EGKB PROCEDURE. Thats what the majority of us have been stating since this discussion started. The join procedures are pretty standard, and at airfields where fast jet traffic fast SEP, can depart, shooting through the 1000' mark, then a procedure would appear to have been drawn up to stop them banging into crosswind traffic, going about their normal safe business of joining across the numbers at 1000' to get into the pattern
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Well my experience of flying in the States is that it is pretty much every man for himself, with particular respect to the unicom airfields, HOWEVER, before I get fried, the standards of R/T, lookout, and general discipline, appear superior to the UK, and I am about to get fried by UK pilots for saying that, but, the thread here has touched on this.
ok then where are the statistics? Are OHJ pro rata any more safe than commercial joins or usa joins? We need stats otherwise it becomes subjective.
If someone can show me that there have been more midairs and/or air proxes on one system or the other then I might be convinced of a case for change.
If someone can show me that there have been more midairs and/or air proxes on one system or the other then I might be convinced of a case for change.
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Yes, however, it was qualified with r/t, discipline and lookout, and I made particular ref to Unicom, where is has to be that way.
Specifically I was referring to some fields where as you approach, calling position and ASSUMING, that the crcuit pattern is one way, when a Lear or similar can take off downwind, straight from his private hangar. It happened to me in Florida, and nr Chicago.
I have experience of Van Nuys where as you may be aware, everything is joining, and yet lookout, comms, positioning and ATC come together, generally nicely.
The UK system in general works, as long as everyone is on the same page, and forgive me, this debate has shown that it may not be the case.
Specifically I was referring to some fields where as you approach, calling position and ASSUMING, that the crcuit pattern is one way, when a Lear or similar can take off downwind, straight from his private hangar. It happened to me in Florida, and nr Chicago.
I have experience of Van Nuys where as you may be aware, everything is joining, and yet lookout, comms, positioning and ATC come together, generally nicely.
The UK system in general works, as long as everyone is on the same page, and forgive me, this debate has shown that it may not be the case.
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"Now throw into that equation a Thruster microlight, an RV6, a TBM700 and a Cessna 152, all with vastly different performance.:
As a point of note as the phrase 'high performance' is frequently cropping up in the thread with reference to RVs. This is a general comment not connected directly with the incident. RVs can indeed climb and cruise at greater speeds than many certified machines.
But in the circuit they can sit quite happily at 'normal' circuit speeds. My 200hp RV-6 would cruise easily at 160+ KIAS. It's stall speeds were 47 KIAS full flap and 52 KIAS clean - pretty much the same as a C152 or Tomahawk.
As a point of note as the phrase 'high performance' is frequently cropping up in the thread with reference to RVs. This is a general comment not connected directly with the incident. RVs can indeed climb and cruise at greater speeds than many certified machines.
But in the circuit they can sit quite happily at 'normal' circuit speeds. My 200hp RV-6 would cruise easily at 160+ KIAS. It's stall speeds were 47 KIAS full flap and 52 KIAS clean - pretty much the same as a C152 or Tomahawk.
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The mail online article speaks of plummeting 400 ft.... If this is correct we've all been barking up the wrong tree.
As for now we've assumed the collision took place at around 1.000 ft.
I have no idea where they got their info from.
Ex-British Airways captain killed after mid-air collision with light aircraft causes him to lose control and crash | Mail Online
(and I've never been practically taught an overhead join during my PPL.....(!) taught it myself afterwards and disliked it always.....)
As for now we've assumed the collision took place at around 1.000 ft.
I have no idea where they got their info from.
Ex-British Airways captain killed after mid-air collision with light aircraft causes him to lose control and crash | Mail Online
(and I've never been practically taught an overhead join during my PPL.....(!) taught it myself afterwards and disliked it always.....)