SkyBoy1981
Bring a towel!
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2004
- Posts
- 1,482
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*****SkyBoy1981 said:Satpak is correct. MOCA is primarily to be used in the event of an engine failure or anything else that would prevent you from being able to maintain the MEA. Otherwise, you should be at least at the MEA.
blah blah blah blah blah. So why prey tell is the MOCA on the chart to begin with?SkyBoy1981 said:Satpak is correct. MOCA is primarily to be used in the event of an engine failure or other safety related situation that would prevent you from being able to maintain the MEA. Otherwise, you should be at least at the MEA.
FN FAL said:blah blah blah blah blah. So why prey tell is the MOCA on the chart to begin with?
And don't give me that 22 Nautical mile crap, cause they don't DELINIATE that distance on the freaking chart. Look at one, where do you see the 22 mile MOCA markings?...no where.
GRB offered MOCA, I TOOK IT. I can't help it if you never flew ifr except under a hood or with someone else who was responsible for the flight.
With all due respect, the MOCA raises the standard base of the AIRWAY...it does not lower it. And your ops specs don't apply to my use of the MOCA. I would see no reason for an airliner to use a MOCA to stay out of icing. In addition, your ops specs do not limit me from doing so in the type of operations I fly in.Donsa320 said:I don't think some of you folks have thought this through. The MOCA puts you BELOW the airway.
FN FAL said:Nice avatar, craptacular real life IFR experience...you'll make a great regional pilot.
To answer all of your questions...no, you freaking bone head.
choke yourself on my hand.
Hahaha...that's why I would never get an ICC from a regional puke.
blah blah blah blah blah.
HAZ-MAT said:what the hell are MEA and MOCA????????
the only thing i care about is the MVA (minimum vectoring altitude)
I'll agree with that. The airway starts at 1200 AGL...and is Class "E" airspace.Donsa320 said:The base of the airway and contolled airspace is 1200 ft except where the 700 ft "E" or surface "B, C, D & E" areas exist.
If you were down there groping along at the MOCA enroute you could expect VFR traffic, flying with a mile visibility clear of cloud, to mix it up with you. They'd be legal, you would not be.
I'd let you hold the yoke for while as I ate lunch as well...just so long as you didn't scare me too much and you can log it as you wish. Just don't be touching me...that's all I ask.SkyBoy1981 said:Real classy response there, sparky. I actually flew for 3 years as PIC in several turbine corporate aircraft prior to becomming a "regional puke", but thats neither here nor there.
Is it smart to fly in continious icing when the Airway allows a legal and safe option...NOOOO! Using your faulty syllogism, one would have to wonder why anyone would ever use invisible radio beams to pass within 100 feet of terrain on a precision approach...EGADDDS! For your sins, penance is five minutes here...PENANCE...log it as PIC if you want.SkyBoy1981 said:The 22nm is for radio reception only, as it states in the FAA's Instrument Flying Handbook. If one wishes to fly along in the soup only 1000ft above obstacles and terrain using only a GPS signal to keep them on the airway, I suppose you could fly around at MOCA. Is it legal? Sure, but is it smart?
Yea...it's an emergency...screw the FARS, meet the need. If I'm at MOCA and VMC and I'm passing by an airport after radio failure, I'll land and call and cancel my IFR. If not near an airport, I'm going to meet my needs to the furthest limit of the law and then beyond. Do you think the FAA is going to MISS that three hundred feet difference between MOCA and MEA? I don't have to climb up into ICING conditions just because I lost radio...it's an emergency. Pilot IN Command may deviate. That's why holding a yoke and logging PIC does not a CAPTAIN make. Five more minutes penance here...PENANCE...remember, god is watching!SkyBoy1981 said:First off, what happens if you lose communications?
Climbing three hundred feet is workload? Heck, I bet you just about roll the plane over on a MISSED APPROACH! Five more minutes penance...PENANCESkyBoy1981 said:According to the FAR's the absolute lowest altitude you can maintain after a loss of communications is MEA right? So now you're creating an unnecessary workload for yourself having to climb back to MEA while sorting out all of your other lost comm procedures.
If you look at federal law, the airway is 4 miles wide plus an additional 2 miles wide...I cite federal law. There is no crashing of a aircraft because the GPS craps out...you simply climb to MEA and make your mandatory report of nav loss OR you call the controller up and work out any "deals" that may be available...like this one, CANCEL IFR or how about a VECTOR!SkyBoy1981 said:Then, as someone else mentioned, what happens if that almighty GPS craps out on you? Now you're stuck flying around in the blind until you can climb back up high enough to receive the VOR. I think the advice of any wise pilot would be to stay at or above MEA, unless safety prevents it. Perhaps you could use an ICC from someone, "regional puke" or not. Thanks for playing.
satpak77 said:and...
and...
and...
and...
Real professional posts in response to someones question re MOCA/MEA
MODERATORS: TAKE NOTE, you gonna tolerate this?