Jimmy Nielsen Skrevet 1. april 2001 Skrevet 1. april 2001 Fandt denne her: "ATC: Air Florida 550... Say altitude. 550: Altitude. ATC: Say ALTITUDE! 550: ALTITUDE! ATC: Say 'Cancelling IFR'. 550: Level 8000" Siter
Arnfinn Trønes Skrevet 2. april 2001 Skrevet 2. april 2001 Gode vitser gutter, bidrar likegodt med et par gode jeg også: [image]http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif'>http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif'>http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif[/image] (Transmission as a DC-10 rolls out long after a fast landing...) San Jose Tower: American 751 heavy, turn right at the end if able. If not able, take the Guadalupe exit off of Highway 101 back to the airport. Tower: "Aircraft on final, go around, aircraft on runway." Solo Student Pilot: "Roger" (Continues descent.) Tower: "Aircraft, GO AROUND" Student: "Roger" (Continues descent.) Tower: (Screaming) "AIRCRAFT, GO AROUND!!" Student: "Roger" (Continues descent.) So, the student pilot plunks his airplane down on the numbers, taxies up to where the twin is sitting in the middle of the runway, GOES AROUND it, and continues on to the taxiway. Flere gode morsomheter finner dere bla. på: http://people.aero.und.edu/~draper/humour.html"'>http://people.aero.und.edu/~draper/humour.html" TARGET=_blank>http://people.aero.und.edu/~draper/humour.html http://www.avace.com/Jokes.htm"'>http://www.avace.com/Jokes.htm" TARGET=_blank>http://www.avace.com/Jokes.htm Får vel nesten korte ned denne Topicén før noen av GGGéne reagerer. [image]http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif[/image] [image]http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif[/image] LN-ATR Siter
Gjest Skrevet 2. april 2001 Skrevet 2. april 2001 This Japanese airlines plane is approaching Honolulu international when the tower gives the pilot a clearance he's not familiar with. So he says: ATC could you please walk me through that clearance, it's been a while since I was here last. ATC: Oh yeah when were you here last? Pilot: December 8, 1941! DCA clearance delivery responded to a request for an IFR clearance with a rapid-fire clearance that went on and on, with various VORs, fixes, altitudes, etc. After a pause, a voice came back, in a slow Texas drawl, OK, now why don't you'all say that again, real slow, as if it mattered. A pilot was attempting to deal with New York, and the controller shot everything out a mile a minute. The pilot came back with "New York, you hear how fast I'm a-talkin'? Well, that's how fast I'm a-listnin'". Another pilot obtaining a clearance from the Trenton controller who shot back "Trenton, you can repeat that, oh, about ten times. Or you can say it again once slowly." Billund ATC: Gliders 82 and D5, state position and altitude? 82: Overhead Coal Lake, 6400 feet. D5: Same position, same altitude. ATC (cool, dry voice): So should I go get my collision report form ?? ATC: Say altitude Pilot (feeling frisky): altitude ATC: Say ALTITUDE Pilot: ALTITUDE ATC: Say 'Canceling IFR' Pilot: Level 8000 Several planes were running up and waiting to take off, many Cessnas including a 337. With all the students and several similar call signs, the controllers were getting a tad confused. The controller finally asked: "Cessna 123YZ, are you the Skymaster?" A slightly confused voice with an indeterminate accent replied, after a moment: "Well, my instructor says that I am very good, but I do not think that I would yet be considered the _skymaster_." A friend of mine was ferrying his Blanick to a nearby airport on the other side of some Class C Airspace. The 182 towplane had no radio, but the Blanick did. No problem, after departing the glider called, ATC and gave their intentions to cross The Class C airspace. About halfway across, ATC requested a 90 degree right turn. My friend responded. "What do you want me do? Yell out the window?" A crew in a Baron was taxiing at LAX back in the sixties and encountered one of the (then) new 747's. Both pilot and co- were all eyes as both aircraft approached the same intersection. Baron: Uh, ATC, verify you want me to taxi in front of the 747. ATC: Yeah, it's OK. He's not hungry. Berlin, 1952, airfield real busy. English pilot comes on the radio requesting taxi instructions to the terminal. Controller: Have you not been here before? Pilot: Yes, once in 1945, but I was just passing through! At London Gatwick: a A320 Air France is making an auto-approach. At 200', the computer decided to make a go-around with no reason and no command from the crew. Here is what we head on the TWR freq: Air France: London from Air France 1234, It's going around! London TWR: Air France 1234, report intentions Air France: Well ... to go with it sir ! It was a quiet morning in the control tower at the airport where I was working. I was in the tower position, and my friend was on ground control. One of the small commuters had just landed, and as they taxied to the ramp the female pilot hit the wrong button and her "thank-you for flying with XXX airlines" message went out on the ground control frequency instead of the intercom. My friend heard this, made some wrong assumptions, and made the following VERY un-PC broadcast on his frequency: "Attention all airlines, someone has a stewardess talking on the radio." Tower: Cessna N1234, be advised wake turbulence - UA 737. [pause] Cessna: San Jose tower be advised the Cessna is ahead of the 737. [longer pause] Tower: UA 737, be advised wake turbulence Cessna 172. Someone: Giggles and laughter in background After several unsuccessful attempts to raise the pilot whom the tower has just issued instructions to: "You have to key in the mic...I can't see you when you nod your head..." Vic had just arrived from tech school and hadn't developed a 'radio ear' yet for communicating with the SAC birds and it's his first night on Alpha net. Trying to copy on of his first reports, the aircraft gives call signs as 'Deep 42' Vic asks for a spelling, "Delta-Echo-Echo-Papa, Deep 42" comes the reply. Vic's self conscious, knowing 7 or 8 other operators are watching and listening. He asks the BUF to repeat. And does so again for a third time. Vic still didn't get it and asks a fourth time. Loud and clear, the BUF replies in a very un-SAC manner, "Deep, like in throat" The place roared. I was taxiing out to the active in a 172 and I had just dialed up tower and checked the approach which was clear. The weather was 15+ vis and no ceiling. I was just about to call tower for clearance when I heard this. ABC: London tower this is alpha bravo charlie on short final 33. TWR: Alpha bravo charlie, negative visual contact pull up go around. I took a good hard look for the a/c and saw nothing so I called tower and got cleared to go. I heard 2 more renditions of the "On short final" and "Pull up go around" act. On the fourth try the pilot got a bit frustrated about the wave off. It went like this. TWR: Negative visual contact pull up and go around. ABC: Well look out you window, I'm right bloody in front of you! Tower came back very cool and collected. TWR: Alpha bravo charlie look down into the centre of the runway pattern. Do you see a big white radar dome? ABC: err....negative dome tower. TWR: That's because you're not over London. You're over Waterloo-Wellington 50 miles north-east of my position. Waterloo-Wellington tower frequency is 125.00. I think they would like to talk to you. ATC: Cessna xxxx What are your intentions? Cessna: (With an Indian Accent) To get my Commercial Pilots License and Instrument Rating. ATC: Cessna xxxx I meant in the next five minutes not years. Lufthansa flight XXX: Ground, Lufthansa XYZ request back taxi, it appears we are missing a passenger, and must return to the gate. Unknown voice on the frequency: Check your ovens... American 127: San Jose Ground, American 127 off 30R, request taxi instructions Ground: American 127, if able turn off at next intersection and taxi to gate. If unable, take the Guadeloupe exit off highway 101 and turn right at the first intersection to get back to the airport. "Atlanta tower, United 123 is with you." "United 123, you are cleared to land on 27 right." "Atlanta tower, Delta 765." "Delta 765, you are cleared to land on 9 left." After a pause to digest this, we hear.... "Uh... Atlanta, I think you have that United flight and us coming into the same runway in opposite directions?" Another pause.. "Y'all be careful, now, y' hear?" Tower: United 123, traffic 3 o'clock, 2 miles, an American Fokker 100. United: Tower, United 123. I've wanted to say this for a long time: I'VE GOT THAT FOKKER IN SIGHT! A true story from my Scottish days when a C152 pilot was asked to report his height prior to clearance to enter the zone, replied: "Flight Level Three Thousand, Seven Hundred", upon which the Controller very smartly replied, "Roger, prepare to fire retro-rockets and re-enter the atmosphere time 07"! While standing watch as the Squadron Duty Officer at VT-26, Beeville, TX, we used to look for anything to relieve the boredom. Occasionally a student would check in on base frequency after startup, then forget to switch and ask for a clearance from what they thought was Chase Clearance. One day we hit the mother lode, when our squadron CO forgot to switch his radio, and calls what he thinks is clearance while sitting in his T-2C Buckeye jet. [distinctive voice of CO on radio] CO: Clearance, XYZ, ready to copy Me as SDO: Roger, XYZ, your cleared to Rome via Nome as filed, climb and maintain FL 650, execute the Hialuah 121 departure, intercept the 370 radial off of the Foobar tacan, contact departure 123.4 [long pause, CO wasn't really listening, thinks up excuse to ask clearance to repeat] CO: Clearance, you were stepped on, say again SDO: Roger, you're cleared as filed via the Hyatuke 385 departure, beware of nesting raptors at the departure end, noise abatement in effect within 100 mile radius, request you climb to 5,000 feet by departure end of runway, departing aircraft reports TACAN anomaly on the 150 at 35, winds 160 at 100, you're cleared for hover taxi, takeoff spot 5 C-150: Tower this is N-ABCD can you give us a ground speed please? Tower: Roger N-ABCD we show you at 110 knots Mooney: (Showing off a bit) tower this is N-EFGH can you give US a ground speed please? Tower: Roger that N-EFGH we show you at 201 knots F-18: (Showing off a lot and said with a Texas drawl). Heh Heh.. tower how about XXXX, can you give US a ground speed please? Tower: Roger XXXX we show you at 580 knots. ... then in a distant crackly voice, "Tower, we'd like a ground speed too please..." Tower: Ummmm ahhh .... must be something wrong with our equipment here, I show you at 1500 knots sir. "No sir, this is a SR-71. Thank you for the reading." Oakland Center at 2100 local. late at night, very light traffic. United 21 is going to Hawaii from NY at FL390, this is WAFDOF but he's a long hauler so we try to let them fly at optimum altitude. Speedbird 35 is going to Chicago from Hawaii at FL 390. United21: United 21, Oakland Center, level 390 Center: United 21, 390 Speedbird35: Speedbird 35, Oakland Center, level 390 Center: Speedbird 35, 390 At this point the controller student (me) says "those two are pointed right at each other!". They we're 300 miles apart pointed nose to nose. The controller and student then have a quick discussion about ways of insuring we wouldn't make a big noise over Modesto. The solution proposed by the student (me again) was to turn one 10 degrees right, the other 10 degrees right, let them get approx 10 miles lateral separation (5 is the minimum), pass, and then clear them back on course. I could tell the controller was mighty proud of his student's clear thinking! So he let the student do some ATC work! Student: Speedbird35 turn 10 degrees right for traffic, expect direct Coaldale Speedbird35: 10 right, expect Coaldale, Speedbird35 Student: United 21 turn 10 degrees right for traffic, expect direct Fuzzy United21: Long pause..... Center.... we're going all the way to Hawaii tonight, how about turning our traffic out of our way. This wasn't how it was supposed to work? The student looked to his mentor for direction. The instructor took over. Center: United 21, turn 20 degrees right for traffic, traffic 12 o'clock, opposite direction, same altitude. United 21: Center do you realize how much fuel a 747 will burn with this vector? By this time the Speedbird is slowly moving off to the right. They won't bang together anymore but in the ATC lingo, we're about to have a deal. I'm ready to do anything! The old salty controller reply's in a slow measured response. Center: United 21 understood, advise you rig for midair collision and flash the seatbelt sign. United 21: 20 degrees right, expect direct! Another student, a not too bright woman, was coming in for a landing. The radio in the FBO was set to the ground freq. It seems that she land on the taxi way. The ground controller told her, "please call 555-xxxx after you park the plane". She answered, "No thank you sir, I'm already married." Cessna: Bay Approach, Cessna 12345 over South County Airport at 4 thousand feet, request permission to land at San Jose. Bay Approach: Cessna 12345, Squawk 4567, and do you have Hotel? (the current SJC ATIS) Cessna: Negative, we're going to stay with my sister-in-law. American 123: Does your sister-in-law have any extra rooms? "American 303 heavy, DFW tower. Make 360 for sequencing." "DFW, American 303 heavy. Do you know how much it costs the airline for me to 360 this thing? About $2600!" "American 303 heavy, DFW. Make one of those $2600 turns for sequencing, then report outer marker." One day Airline A's DC-9 was approaching Glasgow minutes ahead of a Airline B's 737. The DC-9 got clearance for the descent and the 737 soon after. After handover from the Airways to the Area Radar facility it was noticed that the 737 which was behind the DC-9 was catching up the DC-9 even though they were both reduced to the same speed 250kts. The 737 was advised by ATC then to reduce to 230 knots for separation. Several more minutes went by and the ATC radar noticed that still, the 737 was catching up the DC-9. So, the 737 crew were advised to reduce to 210kts. Again the 737 was told to reduce speed once again. This time the Captain replied to the instruction "Don't you know the Stalling speed of a 737 is?". To which the ATC replied "I have no idea but if you ask the pilot sitting next to you, he might know!" In the 70's an H.S. Trident (a noisy aircraft) climbing out of Glasgow for London and into the Airway. Being late at night and above normal ATC restrictions request climb to cruise altitude. Normally this would be approved due to the limited traffic and this captain renown for being awkward. Trident: Request climb FL330 ATC: Climb FL 180 and report level. The Trident is in the climb and the Captain comes on the radio again requesting to continue the climb. ATC: Report and maintain FL180 due to Noise Abatement. At this the Captain comes back on the radio. Trident: What do mean by Noise Abatement? ATC: If you continue your climb you will be in the direct path of a 747 coming the other way and there will be an almighty bang! Siter
Christopher Eriksen Skrevet 2. april 2001 Skrevet 2. april 2001 Hehe.. [image]http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/smile.gif[/image] Her er en til av samme type [image]http://www.flightsim.no/ubb/images/icons/wink.gif[/image] : Tower: Lufthansa 893, number one, check for workers on the taxiway Pilot: Roger. We've checked the workers, they are all working! ------------------ Christopher Eriksen http://www.geocities.com/ceriksen2000"'>http://www.geocities.com/ceriksen2000" TARGET=_blank>http://www.geocities.com/ceriksen2000 [Endret av Christopher Eriksen 02-04-2001.] Siter
Yngve J.Steien Skrevet 2. april 2001 Skrevet 2. april 2001 Tower(tydelig irritert): IS THAT ROGER!!! Pilot: NO,no this is Pierre. ------------------ yngveS Siter
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