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SLC Controllers and everyone else in the system

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Did you request 35? Agreed, taxi time seems excessive for that flight, though 5h 38m taxi for a 52m scheduled block probably beats that.
The Tower calls the rwy in use and tells Tracon to take all the arrivals to whichever rwy they decide.
Depends on the bank, arrivals or departures.

I requested 35 twice, dont get me wrong I know there will be delays. Just dont have me start my engines until you are ready to launch me. I get 10 to 15 minute start delays running into places like vegas all the time. The difference is they have me call for start and I am not wasting all that fuel
 
A few years ago I was a liason with ATC. We used to hold regular meetings with the tower, tracon, and center, and sometimes the military. It was basically a territorial fight. Center would impose certain restrictions on approach, and approach would fight back with some restrictions of their own, and vice versa. That's why we get assigned 250kts by center, and as soon as we check in with approach they ask for maximun forward speed. No one between us and the runway.

That territorial fight between the tower and tracon was one of the reasons they were so slow to start using the east runway. We could be backed up on H, and RWY 35 would go unused.

I understand that the terrain imposes some limitations that flat landers don't have to deal with, but there is a lot more to it than just the mountains.
 
The problem with the outer fix speeds is very simple, whoever is working flow control that day or shift, looks at the ASD and issues speeds to flow control in Washington. Pretty stupid since the center is just across the airport. But, that is how the FAA operates. Unfortunately the controllers manning the positions have no say in the speeds. So when you are switched to TRACON is trying to flow 4 feeds into one downwind. I was usually in trouble daily due to my refusal to accept speeds when they were not needed. I would just call the sector and tell the controller to drop the speeds if there was a tie, just stack them up. Always pissed off the 'weak' flow controllers. The good ones never put speeds on my side, ever.
Still, there are good ones and some not so good.
And yes, the tower was the ones directing the show and it really ticked us off in the TRACON....
 
Goose,
The reason for those heading changes is as you go further on the downwind, your right wing is basically fliying in the MVA and as you go south it moves east and curves toward the east. There is no straight line for the contoller to just follow. Also the upper wind regularly comes over the mountains and they have to work with that also. In addition as you are on the left downwind to 34L, straight in traffic from over FFU is on the 34R loc. There is VERY little room for you to make the left turn from downwind to base then base to final. Anyone who is not turning at 30 deg of bank is going to have serious trouble. Most of the time it was American's 88's. 15 deg and no more. Yes, I asked them. My soulution, along with most all conrollers was to climb them to 110 and send them to OGD to either hold or end of the line.
There is NO room to do anything with the MVA's so the heading changes are the only way to keep you out of the mountains and the controllers from having a deal, I know, I had one right there over U42.

I humbly stand corrected! Gosh, there I go doing exact thing that gets me all riled up when other people do it--making judgements without any remote knowledge of the facts of the matter. And orignially suspected that it was some sort of scenario exactly as you had described before I jumped on the bandwagon. Apologies, apologies!

-Goose
 
I humbly stand corrected! Gosh, there I go doing exact thing that gets me all riled up when other people do it--making judgements without any remote knowledge of the facts of the matter. And orignially suspected that it was some sort of scenario exactly as you had described before I jumped on the bandwagon. Apologies, apologies!

-Goose

No worries at all man!!
 
I went into there a couple weeks ago and the captain I was flying with said the same thing. They act like they are controlling NY or Washington DC airspace over there.

Could someone please explain, why the SLC controllers both approach and center but mainly approach seem to be one of the most retarded bunch out there. Come on SLC isn't even that busy. Someone shed some light please.
 
My favorite is a flight that takes 1 hour 36 minutes and a taxi that takes 27 minutes. No joke and this is not just one occurrence, we are 3 for 3 of landing 34 right and taxiing all the way to the east side. This followed by a 22 minute delay for departure with both engines running. Total waist of fuel for just one of the days was about 1500 lbs, or about $1600.00. Very sad when they have a nice general aviation runway that dumps you right off into Million air

This happens ALL the time when we fly into SLC

AND even though we request 35 sometimes the controllers just say we are not going to give it to you.

That taxi time is no exaggeration.

IN all fairness, I'm really just pissed because I want out of the airplane.

It is however a big waste of money.

And if you give a crap oil/ carbon etc.

Cheers
 
I'd say that 9/10 times, our taxi in SLC is 5 minutes or less (and in the Bro we are in and out of SLC every other leg). It's just if you hit it during the Delta rush, expect some delays. It seems like landing South and then having to taxi over to the E gates from Rwy 17 is the worst combo--I think we waited for 20-30 minutes once just to cross 16L.

But I've waited just as long in LAX and SFO.

-Goose
 
As a Boston Center controller, thanks for all of the compliments...we are fantastic LOL :)

As for crappy controllers, they are everywhere. Part of the problem, which is going to get worse over the next few years, is the number of trainees working traffic. There are days where almost every scope has a trainee in front of it. And just wait until you are flying and every controller you talk to has been on the job for less than 3 years and no one has any experience....Friday and Saturday nights will likely be the worst since the senior guys have these shifts off.

Yesterday I was training. I've been a controller for 3.5 years, my trainee has been here for 1.5 years, and my D side for 1 year. So a combined total of 6 years of experience. Meanwhile, the next sector down had two guys with 15+ years each. Fun fun fun.
 
BOS center: No problems
BOS approach: They have no idea how to vector you to ILS 4R below the glide. 6 times out of 10 you'll be cleared for the approach after a late turn to final above the GS. They do fine on 27 and 22L, but 4R is kicking their ass for some reason.
 

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