islandhopper
Clone War veteran
- Joined
- May 9, 2003
- Posts
- 718
There is no exemption. it is legal, when you're 12 miles off shore, you are in international airspace. Or outside the ADIZ, that might be it. One or the other or both. Throw your radar on next time you get the JULLE arrival and stick a 20 mile ring on it. If you do a JULLE arrival you are not 12 miles until just before coming abeam Diamond Head. If you get roped into the Koko Head arrival then your going for a drive.igneousy2 said:I would say it's true, unfortunatelly you wouldn't get to do it very often unless you were going out of your way just to go fast. Most of the routes don't go that far offshore. You may be more than 12 miles from HNL but you aren't usually 12 miles off shore unless you are coming from directly south, but there is nothing directly south. I've heard that Hawaiian and Aloha have an exemption but I don't know that for sure. I do know that they routinely do 300knots indicated while being vectored for the 8L channel. When I'm doing 240 and the controller is telling Aloha that the traffic they are following (me) is 50 knots slower then I'm guessing they aren't following the 250 rule. Legaly or not...I don't know.
Later
On our International runs.. Straight south of Honolulu may only be the arrivals and departures for the few South Pacific runs. But don't forget we do many more arrivals into Maui from California every day. Those are straight out of the North. It is legal fly a descent profile at say 290 until 8K that works out to about 240 @ 12 miles.
On our inter-island runs.. Going into places like Kona and Lihue you can adjust your descent profile to take advantage of the rule and slow down later as you approach both airports from the deep blue.
We slow it down coming from Lihue to Honolulu as Kaena Point sticks out into our flight path and puts us in the 12 mile deal way out over the water still. Going into Maui you are over 10K while still over Lanai so we slow it down from Lanai into OGG. Coming into HNL from the East you need to slow down when the controller asks you to, or abeam Diamond Head. (12 miles) The controllers kind of expect you to keep a certain pace and if you slow at 10K way out closer to Lanai than Oahu they will often ask you to speed it up.
Remember, the airspace between HNL and OGG is traditionally the busyest, most congested run in the USA. Not any of the NE or SO Cal corridors. But PHX into So Cal was impossible some days. 250 the whole friggin way some days!
All in all I like the way things are in Hawaii. Go fast, keep it safe.