How to fly a direct entry holding pattern when approaching from an awkward angle?
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If my course lies anywhere between 30 deg. adjacent to the 'direct entry' sector borders, do I fly the holding pattern as depicted below?
holding
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
If my course lies anywhere between 30 deg. adjacent to the 'direct entry' sector borders, do I fly the holding pattern as depicted below?
holding
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Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
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– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
If my course lies anywhere between 30 deg. adjacent to the 'direct entry' sector borders, do I fly the holding pattern as depicted below?
holding
$endgroup$
If my course lies anywhere between 30 deg. adjacent to the 'direct entry' sector borders, do I fly the holding pattern as depicted below?
holding
holding
asked 6 hours ago
177177
1014
1014
$begingroup$
Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
$endgroup$
– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
$endgroup$
– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
$endgroup$
– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
$endgroup$
– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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The answer is yes, you would enter holding just as you depicted.
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To add to Michael Hall's answer, the direct entry is the one where you get straight on to the "racetrack" with minimum maneuvering and that is possible from anywhere within the direct entry sector. The other two entries involve initial maneuvering "off the racetrack" so to speak.
That entry diagram is a procedural convention, not a hard regulation you must follow exactly. The whole area is protected airspace, so it's not all that critical that you fly exactly this or exactly that as long as you stay in the protected airspace. You'll get dinged on a check ride for using a bad entry (using a sector's procedure while significantly outside of the boundary of that sector), but ATC would never bust you because you didn't follow the entry protocol perfectly, as long as you didn't leave the protected airspace and you got established properly without too much meandering around.
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
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active
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The answer is yes, you would enter holding just as you depicted.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The answer is yes, you would enter holding just as you depicted.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The answer is yes, you would enter holding just as you depicted.
$endgroup$
The answer is yes, you would enter holding just as you depicted.
answered 4 hours ago
Michael HallMichael Hall
1,391412
1,391412
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
To add to Michael Hall's answer, the direct entry is the one where you get straight on to the "racetrack" with minimum maneuvering and that is possible from anywhere within the direct entry sector. The other two entries involve initial maneuvering "off the racetrack" so to speak.
That entry diagram is a procedural convention, not a hard regulation you must follow exactly. The whole area is protected airspace, so it's not all that critical that you fly exactly this or exactly that as long as you stay in the protected airspace. You'll get dinged on a check ride for using a bad entry (using a sector's procedure while significantly outside of the boundary of that sector), but ATC would never bust you because you didn't follow the entry protocol perfectly, as long as you didn't leave the protected airspace and you got established properly without too much meandering around.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
To add to Michael Hall's answer, the direct entry is the one where you get straight on to the "racetrack" with minimum maneuvering and that is possible from anywhere within the direct entry sector. The other two entries involve initial maneuvering "off the racetrack" so to speak.
That entry diagram is a procedural convention, not a hard regulation you must follow exactly. The whole area is protected airspace, so it's not all that critical that you fly exactly this or exactly that as long as you stay in the protected airspace. You'll get dinged on a check ride for using a bad entry (using a sector's procedure while significantly outside of the boundary of that sector), but ATC would never bust you because you didn't follow the entry protocol perfectly, as long as you didn't leave the protected airspace and you got established properly without too much meandering around.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
To add to Michael Hall's answer, the direct entry is the one where you get straight on to the "racetrack" with minimum maneuvering and that is possible from anywhere within the direct entry sector. The other two entries involve initial maneuvering "off the racetrack" so to speak.
That entry diagram is a procedural convention, not a hard regulation you must follow exactly. The whole area is protected airspace, so it's not all that critical that you fly exactly this or exactly that as long as you stay in the protected airspace. You'll get dinged on a check ride for using a bad entry (using a sector's procedure while significantly outside of the boundary of that sector), but ATC would never bust you because you didn't follow the entry protocol perfectly, as long as you didn't leave the protected airspace and you got established properly without too much meandering around.
$endgroup$
To add to Michael Hall's answer, the direct entry is the one where you get straight on to the "racetrack" with minimum maneuvering and that is possible from anywhere within the direct entry sector. The other two entries involve initial maneuvering "off the racetrack" so to speak.
That entry diagram is a procedural convention, not a hard regulation you must follow exactly. The whole area is protected airspace, so it's not all that critical that you fly exactly this or exactly that as long as you stay in the protected airspace. You'll get dinged on a check ride for using a bad entry (using a sector's procedure while significantly outside of the boundary of that sector), but ATC would never bust you because you didn't follow the entry protocol perfectly, as long as you didn't leave the protected airspace and you got established properly without too much meandering around.
answered 2 hours ago
John KJohn K
19.3k12355
19.3k12355
add a comment |
add a comment |
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$begingroup$
Very good video on MzeroA.com about this.
$endgroup$
– Robert DiGiovanni
1 hour ago