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| Senior Member | All my trips start at an airport just on the south edge of Philly's airspace. After departure I have to fly a northernly heading for about 10 minutes until they let me turn south. This adds about 20 minutes to all of south bound trips and they also step climb me at a very slow rate. Now that it is cold outside, we will be doing a lot of south FL trips, but there's no way to make it non stop unless I climb straight to the mid twenties and head southbound right away. Would I be able to depart VFR to the south and get my clearance airborn with Wash Center, or would only Philly be able to issue me my clearance? The airport in question is EVY if it helps. Thanks, Alex.
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| | #2 |
| Old Skool Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Winchestertonfieldville
Posts: 6,249
| I used to depart VFR nearly everytime I was going to fly IFR out of Phoenix to slim down my wheels up time. A simple radio call to ABQ or PHX center and I was on an IFR plan. Sometimes though, when the weather is down a pop-up clearance was not well received.
__________________ The simplest answer tends to be correct. |
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| | #3 | |
| Old Skool | As long as you stay out of the Bravo on your way out it shouldn't be a problem picking up the clearance with Washington. Just keep in mind it may take them a while to a) get to you and b) dig up your clearance so you may be stuck VFR for a while. Quote:
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| | #4 |
| Old Skool Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Winchestertonfieldville
Posts: 6,249
| Ha!! I meant PHX approach.
__________________ The simplest answer tends to be correct. |
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| | #5 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 232
| Remember you are not guarented IFR service if you are already in the air. If the weather is bad and ATC is super busy with flow/edcts and they feel you are trying to get around the system by departing VFR and then picking up IFR in the air, you could be refused IFR services or put into holding for a really long time. I am not a center guy but thats what we tell pilots who ask about it at my airport. |
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| | #6 |
| Newbie Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Texas
Posts: 8
| you can depart vfr and pick up your clearance in the air. when you depart ifr sometimes you get stepped up and get vectors but you are under close watch of the approach controller. departing vfr may shorten your trip but you are on your own before that. some days you will be able to pick up a clearance as soon as you call up and some days you will have to provide your own navigation and separation until they get to you. |
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| | #7 |
| Old Skool Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: CFI / CFII in PA
Posts: 2,574
| in my experience Philly seems like one of the only places where they seem to NOT be able to handle a pop up clearance when they're remotely busy. Everywhere else, "xxx apch, king air xxx 3000, ready to copy IFR" |
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| | #8 | |
| Senior Member | Thanks for the comments. Quote:
Alex.
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 598
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| | #10 |
| Newbie Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Texas
Posts: 8
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| | #11 | |
| Old Skool | Quote:
She is generally only working 3 to 4 planes and seems agitated and overworked doing it. She often pesters inbound FedEx jets if they have the field in sight or not - she seriously seems angry when they don't have the field - as if lining them up for an approach would take up too much of her precious time. I also once had a tower controller at Philly ask ME about the airport SOP. I had asked for a specific runway to takeoff from, and she told me she was new, and asked if the other guys usually let me depart that runway. | |
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| | #12 | |
| Old Skool Join Date: Dec 2002 Location: Utopia
Posts: 12,412
| Quote:
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| | #13 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Ohio
Posts: 667
| Quote:
"No...your ass makes the dress look small." -mini | |
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| | #14 |
| Old Skool Join Date: Sep 2001 Location: Inside your OODA loop
Posts: 6,725
| What about filing a composite flight plan, with the VFR portion first? Or is that functionally the same as getting a pop-up clearance?
__________________ Commercial Pilot, ASEL/AMEL/IA Chief Pilot, aerial mapping company Mountain-qualified Search & Rescue/Disaster Relief Mission Pilot, Civil Air Patrol 850+ TT/25 ME B.S., Psychology, University of Utah |
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| | #15 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: That one
Posts: 873
| Not completely sure this would help but its a thought - VFR under Bravo in the direction you need until you can climb under Bravo and eventually pick up your clearance that way. Even if you file IFR from the ground, sounds like you might end up copying a new plan that takes you in the wrong direction until you fit into the traffic flow from what you posted. So, possibly taking it easy on the fuel flow, flying low under the space as a plan at first? Passengers love the city lights from those low altitudes ![]()
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