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- Nov 26, 2001
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A near mid air...
Hoping someone here can educate me about the ways of the world...
I was doing a visual approach into a class D airport that lies beneath the class B airspace. A Citation had just departed the same airport and was climbing in my general vicinity. The approach controller told the Citation to stop his climb at 3,000 feet for opposite direction traffic on the visual approach. The controller called me with a traffic alert, traffic 12 o'clock, a Citation, restricted at 3,000. I was descending through 3,500. I leveled off (3300 feet and then initatiated a climb back up to 3,500, while concurring calling, "I'm at 3,330. I'll climb back up to 3,500, negative contact."
The Citation, it turns out, did not stop his climb at 3,000, but continued his climb while barely missing me. We both made agressive manuevers to avoid hitting each other. I saw the belly of his aircraft very clearly as he went overheard.
The controller didn't do anything wrong, as far as I can tell, because I heard him tell the Citation to maintain 3,000, and the Citation read back the clearance properly. For some reason, this guy continued to climb anyway.
I reported to the controller a near-miss and said I wanted to file a report. Another controller's voice came over the radio and handed me off to the tower, with no mention of my comment that I wanted to file a near-mid air collision.
When I called the appoach controllers after landing, they explained to me that the departing Citation was VFR. I understand that controllers provide no separation between IFR and VFR traffic in the airspace we were in. I also understand that altitude directives are advisory in nature to VFR aircraft, much like headings and so forth. But it concerns me that this pilot read back that he would maintain and altitude and then didn't, almost hitting me.
I was told if I wanted to file the NMAC, I'd have to go to the FSDO. So my question is, if I file a NMAC, what happens then?
Hoping someone here can educate me about the ways of the world...
I was doing a visual approach into a class D airport that lies beneath the class B airspace. A Citation had just departed the same airport and was climbing in my general vicinity. The approach controller told the Citation to stop his climb at 3,000 feet for opposite direction traffic on the visual approach. The controller called me with a traffic alert, traffic 12 o'clock, a Citation, restricted at 3,000. I was descending through 3,500. I leveled off (3300 feet and then initatiated a climb back up to 3,500, while concurring calling, "I'm at 3,330. I'll climb back up to 3,500, negative contact."
The Citation, it turns out, did not stop his climb at 3,000, but continued his climb while barely missing me. We both made agressive manuevers to avoid hitting each other. I saw the belly of his aircraft very clearly as he went overheard.
The controller didn't do anything wrong, as far as I can tell, because I heard him tell the Citation to maintain 3,000, and the Citation read back the clearance properly. For some reason, this guy continued to climb anyway.
I reported to the controller a near-miss and said I wanted to file a report. Another controller's voice came over the radio and handed me off to the tower, with no mention of my comment that I wanted to file a near-mid air collision.
When I called the appoach controllers after landing, they explained to me that the departing Citation was VFR. I understand that controllers provide no separation between IFR and VFR traffic in the airspace we were in. I also understand that altitude directives are advisory in nature to VFR aircraft, much like headings and so forth. But it concerns me that this pilot read back that he would maintain and altitude and then didn't, almost hitting me.
I was told if I wanted to file the NMAC, I'd have to go to the FSDO. So my question is, if I file a NMAC, what happens then?
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