RECITE A PRAYER…(15 SECONDS). ATM TOPIC 1. INTRODUCTION TO AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT,TYPE OF CONTROL AREAS & FLIGHT PLAN 2. AERODROME CONTROL 3. AREA CONTROL.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Work load and responsibilit y npor. Ing. Miroslava Šimonová.
Advertisements

Air Traffic Management
Property of Lear Siegler
METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION FOR GENERAL AVIATION IN SLOVENIA.
#4407. When may ATC request a detailed report of an emergency even though a rule has not been violated? A- When priority has been given. B- Anytime an.
Navigation 3 Airspace Classes A-G ATZ MATZ
Part 4. ATC clearances and instructions
O/Cdt. Darcel “I picked the wrong day to stop teaching Air Law”
Instrument Ground Training Module 4 & 5
Protection Values for VOR-Defined ATS Routes
6. COMMUNICATIONS Radio Telephone (R/T) and Radio Navigation (R/N) services R/T Communications English is the standard language for all commercial flights,
Wings of Freedom TWO – WAY RADIO FAILURE. Wings of Freedom REFERENCES FAR Flight Information Handbook, Section A AIM, Section Individual.
1.06 ATC, Flight Planning, and Rules of the Air
Air Law 1.05 Airspace References: FTGU pages TC AIM.
Normal and Emergency Communication Procedures
AIR LAW – FLIGHT RULES Airspace classification -1 A.Above ft (FL200) Instrument (IFR) flights only B Visual (VFR) and Instrument (IFR) flights* C.All.
Recite a prayer…(15 seconds)
Sep 2012 Lesson 3.4 Air Law Air Traffic Rules. Reference From the Ground Up Chapter 5.1: Air Traffic Rules and Procedures Pages
Stabilized Constant Descent Angle NPA’s
AIR SPACE Airspace and Airports.
A- Class B airspace to 10,000 feet MSL.
En Route Performance CPL Performance.
Chapter 5:intrument flight rules
Regional Gliding School Domestic Airspace l Canadian Domestic Airspace includes all airspace over the Canadian land mass and the Canadian Arctic and.
AIRSPACE What’s old –What’s new!.
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL Presented by S.SUMESWAR PATRO Regd no:
1 July 18, 2011 Runway 19 Dalton Departure Procedure Flight Crews requesting the Dalton 19 Departure MUST possess the chart and adhere strictly to the.
1 Bronze C Airspace. 2 As a rule of thumb you must not fly over a congested area at less than 1500ft above the highest fixed object within 600m (horizontally)
“Yes, but is there any air in space?”
Recite a prayer…(15 seconds)
6-1 Design of UAV Systems UAV operating environmentsc 2002 LM Corporation Lesson objective - to discuss UAV Operating Environments including … National.
Leading Cadet Training
Lecture 3: Air Traffic Control Tower
RECITE A PRAYER…(15 SECONDS). ATM TOPIC 1. INTRODUCTION TO AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT,TYPE OF CONTROL AREAS & FLIGHT PLAN 2. AERODROME CONTROL 3. AREA CONTROL.
ATC1 Air Traffic Control ATC2 Purpose of ATC Safety — Conflict Avoidance — Separation of aircraft Visual Flight Rules Instrument Flight Rules Efficiency.
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL.
LECTURE 4: ICAO CHART requirements
National Airspace System
Airspace 1 st LT Zouhar Jakub 12 th September 2014.
Sep 2012 Lesson 3.2 Air Law Airspace. Reference From the Ground Up Chapter 4.2: The Canadian Airspace System Pages
Review Chapter 4-8. Departure and Arrival Charts DPs, STARs and visual approaches are routinely assigned by ATC DPs and STARs are issued to simplify clearance.
Low Level Flying And Special Use Airspace Capt John Withelder.
ASAS Crossing and Passing Applications in Radar Airspace (operational concept and operational procedure) Jean-Marc Loscos, Bernard Hasquenoph, Claude Chamayou.
Arrival Charts and Procedures
REGULATIONS FOR ARMY AIRCRAFT CW2 ROBERT GOEBEL. Administrative Please turn off all: –Cell phones –Beepers –Palm Pilots –Gameboys –Stereos –Watch alarms.
UML DESIGN By: J Kamala Ramya Y Devika
~ RPAS use and regulation of civil Air Traffic Control point of view Acceptable and reasonable rules are needed Mr. Kornél Szepessy CEO 3-4th of November.
FAA – Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge
Vertical, lateral separations based on time / distance
TYPES, AIRSPACE CLASSIFICATION, CHANGE FROM ONE TO ANOTHER
AIR TRAFFIC ONTROL.
Допълнение 7 на PANS-ATM (ICAO Doc 4444)
U.S. AIRSPACE.
Assignment of Cruising Levels
Airspace.
Airspace.
Unit-3 FLIGHT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Airports, Airspace, & Radio Communication
VARIOUS KINDS OF SEPARATION
OPERATIONS ON PARALLEL OR NEAR-PARALLEL RUNWAYS
longitudinal separations based on time / distance
Airspace Updated to include more current graphics and the latest procedural changes.
1.05 Airspace References: FTGU pages TC AIM
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SERVICE
SEPARATION Module 1, Topic 1.
1.06 ATC, Flight Planning, and Rules of the Air
How Air Traffic Is Coordinated
Magesh Mani BSACIST.
ATC Clearances Chapter 3 Section C.
Presentation transcript:

RECITE A PRAYER…(15 SECONDS)

ATM TOPIC 1. INTRODUCTION TO AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT,TYPE OF CONTROL AREAS & FLIGHT PLAN 2. AERODROME CONTROL 3. AREA CONTROL 4. APPROACH CONTROL mid-term test FLIGHT RULES –IFR 6. VISUAL FLIGHT RULE-VFR 7. RADIO TELEPHONY COMMUNICATION 8. THE LET DOWN PROCEDURE Final exam

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:AREA CONTROL Air traffic service Air Traffic Control Unit Aerodrome controller Area Controller Flight information service Alerting System Approach control

CHAPTER 2: AREA CONTROL

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

~~What is the AREA CONTROL?~~ ~~The facility established to provide air traffic control service to aircraft operating on IFR flight plans within controlled airspace, principally during the en route phase of flight.~~ FAA definition….

CHAPTER 3: AREA CONTROL Or in other word… ~~Area Control (ACC) owns all airspace within his Flight Information Region (FIR) that is not controlled by any APP or TWR.~~ ~~ACC (CTR) controls the aircraft while (over flying) en route or climbing or descending from or into an airfield situated in its Flight Information Region (FIR).~~ ~~cover from 9000 ft to ft

Preflight & Take- off Climb Cruise / En-route Descend Approach And Landing

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

CHAPTER 3: AREA CONTROL ~~What is the Flight information region?~~ FIR is an aviation term used to describe airspace with specific dimensions, in which a flight information service and an alerting service are provided.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:Area Control Basically the job of an Area Controller exist of three main points of attention: 1. Traffic flying in between these entries and exits 2.Traffic entering his area 3. Traffic leaving his area

CHAPTER 2: AERODROME CONTROL

Chapter 3:Area Control In between Entry and Exit 1. To guide safely the traffic between the entry and the exit. Needs to have a working plan. 2 Factors like a different rate of climb the expected or a sudden interruption by another pilot influence the execution of the plan. Therefore a constant update is inevitable. 3 Separation techniques used are specific, since at higher altitudes aircraft behave differently. Higher speeds and thus slower reactions. 4 Simply said, be prepared, constantly for the next step not to lose the overall view. Realize that a big area means different problems at different sides of the screen.

Chapter 3:Area Control Basically the job of an Area Controller exist of three main points of attention: 1. Traffic flying in between these entries and exits 2.Traffic entering his area 3. Traffic leaving his area

CHAPTER 2: AERODROME CONTROL

Chapter 3:Area Control Entry While entering the area the controller has to understand as quickly as possible what the new traffic situation is and where the new traffic shall go to. What will be his routing and what does he have to do with it? Is it an inbound that has to descent? or Is it an over flight?

Chapter 3:Area Control Basically the job of an Area Controller exist of three main points of attention: 1. Traffic flying in between these entries and exits 2.Traffic entering his area 3. Traffic leaving his area

CHAPTER 2: AERODROME CONTROL

Chapter 3:Area Control Exit While exiting the area the controller has to arrange for a proper separation, not only between the leaving traffic, but in respect of his own traffic as well. He has to respect the Letter of Agreement (LoA) with the neighboring unit. Simply said: He has to deliver the traffic "clean" to the next unit.

Chapter 3:Area Control Area Controller Responsibility cont….. The Area Controller handles all the traffic in the controlled airspace of an Flight Information Region (FIR), that is not controlled by any other ATC unit. He is responsible for separation between aircraft during en-route descent, climb-out and overflying the controlled area.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:Area Control En-route clearance The initial clearance is the en-route clearance. After proper identification, the pilot will receive: 1.The clearance to either maintain his actual flight level and continue on his cleared flight plan route, 2.Or the clearance to continue, but to expect initial descent soon for an adjacent destination. Adjacent to the actual control area.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:Area Control Transfer or hand-off All en-route, climbing and descending traffic will be transferred well before the Transfer of Control Point, normally before or the latest at the Transfer of Communications Point. Specific level or speed restrictions may apply.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:Area Control Separation ~~In controlled airspace, ATC separates aircraft that are flying in the same area by keeping them at such distances from each other, so the risk of colliding is reduced.~~ There are two types of separation: Horizontal separation Vertical separation

Chapter 3:Area Control ~~What is horizontal separation?~~ Horizontal separation is the minimum distance that must exist between aircraft flying at the same level. This can be achieved either: 1. longitudinally (by spacing aircraft behind each other at a specified distance) or 2. laterally (by spacing aircraft side by side, but again at a specified distance from each other) 3. The minimum required horizontal distance between aircraft at the same level is 5 Nautical Miles (NM) in general. Other distances may be accepted in particular circumstances.

Chapter 3:Area Control ~~What is vertical separation?~~ Vertical separation is the minimum vertical distance that is needed between aircraft that fly within a range of each other that is less than the required minimum horizontal distance. Vertical separation is established by making aircraft fly at different Altitudes or Flight Levels. The required minimum separation can be 500 feet, 1000 feet or 2000 feet.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Chapter 3:Area Control ~~Types of restrictions~~ Due to a specific activity (such as military flights, low level corridors for military jets, flight training, protection of historic buildings, satellite communication centers, nuclear power plants...), some areas receive a special status.

Chapter 3:Area Control These special areas are identified by of a group of letters and figures as follows: a letter:  D for danger area  R for restricted area  P for prohibited area

Chapter 3:Area Control Danger areas - D : An airspace of defined dimensions within which activities dangerous to the flight of aircraft may exist at specified times. It remains at the discretion of the pilot to decide whether or not he can face the risk with a reasonable degree of certainty that it will not have serious consequences for his flight.

Chapter 3:Area Control Restricted areas - R : An airspace of defined dimensions, above the land areas or territorial water, within which the flight of aircraft is restricted in accordance with certain specified conditions. Pilots to decide whether or not they want to expose themselves to such risk.

Chapter 3:Area Control Prohibited areas - P : An airspace of defined dimensions, above the land areas or territorial water, within which the flight of aircraft is prohibited. The prohibited area is completely forbidden to aircraft.

CHAPTER 3:AREA CONTROL Sub-topic 1.Area Control 2.Flight information region 3.Responsibility of area controller 4. En-route clearance 5. Transfer or hand-off 6. Separation 7. Types of restriction 8.Q-bank

Q-bank 1. Please explain the responsibility of area control. 2. What are you understand about the FIR? 3. What the different between danger area, restricted area and prohibited area? 4. There are 2 type separation of the aircraft movement. Please describe it. 5. In your own word, can Pilot enter the restricted area? 6. In your own word, can Pilot enter the danger area? 7. In your own word, can Pilot enter the prohibited area?