enigma
good ol boy
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 2,279
In another string, TIS asked if anyone had experienced a real incursion and mentioned that 60% (or so) of all incursions were pilot error.
I want to discuss what we pilots think could be done to reduce our error rate. I've never been involved in a true incursion, but have come dang close.
How many of you have been berated by ATC after you stopped your taxi in order to insure your own situational awareness?
In my experience, the near incursion almost always takes place when ATC wants the pilot to get in a hurry, or most likely, at an airport where ATC has trained the pilots to "press on regardless" or risk encuring the wrath of a short tempered controller. Or both, like LGA pre-Sept11. It seems as if the ORD controllers would rather have you make a wrong turn than stop. Actually, it seems that they would rather have you do whatever you didn't do. If you stop and query, they would rather have had you keep moving in the wrong direction. If you move in the wrong direction, they would have rather had you stop and ask. So after a while, a pilot learns that you are danged if you do and danged if you don't. It is at that point that we get dangerous.
What do you think?
regards,
enigma
I want to discuss what we pilots think could be done to reduce our error rate. I've never been involved in a true incursion, but have come dang close.
How many of you have been berated by ATC after you stopped your taxi in order to insure your own situational awareness?
In my experience, the near incursion almost always takes place when ATC wants the pilot to get in a hurry, or most likely, at an airport where ATC has trained the pilots to "press on regardless" or risk encuring the wrath of a short tempered controller. Or both, like LGA pre-Sept11. It seems as if the ORD controllers would rather have you make a wrong turn than stop. Actually, it seems that they would rather have you do whatever you didn't do. If you stop and query, they would rather have had you keep moving in the wrong direction. If you move in the wrong direction, they would have rather had you stop and ask. So after a while, a pilot learns that you are danged if you do and danged if you don't. It is at that point that we get dangerous.
What do you think?
regards,
enigma