Handover to tower on IFR approach

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Shinjo B
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Joined: Thu Jun 11, 2015 4:28 pm

Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by Shinjo B »

Hi all ... when switching from one dep/app controller to another the typical check-in phrasing is "NXXX, level 5 thousand" or some such.

What does a tower controller want to know when approach hands you over to them when doing an IFR (e.g., ILS) approach? The same (altitude)? Or should you state your distance (DME)?
Justin Lerner
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Re: Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by Justin Lerner »

"Tower, Callsign, [ILS/visual/whatever] [runway]" is about as abbreviated as it gets.
stevekirks
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Re: Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by stevekirks »

Shinjo B wrote:Hi all ... when switching from one dep/app controller to another the typical check-in phrasing is "NXXX, level 5 thousand" or some such.

What does a tower controller want to know when approach hands you over to them when doing an IFR (e.g., ILS) approach? The same (altitude)? Or should you state your distance (DME)?
There are nuances, but generally, you check in with your last instructions:

"John Wayne Tower, N533ET on the visual approach 20R"

So:

It's tower name, callsign, current approach and assigned runway. You're telling the controller who you are and "your intentions" which is to follow your IFR flight plan to that destination using the assigned approach.
Steve Kirks (sKirks on Twitch)
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HRutila
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Re: Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by HRutila »

What Justin (edit: and Steve!) posted is really all you need to say on initial call. In the rare cases where the tower needs additional information, they'll ask for it on a subsequent call. An example of a request for additional information is "Say position." State your distance from a published waypoint on the approach, or if inside the FAF, your distance from the runway, if known. This is used usually when the tower lacks radar due to an outage or lack of a radar display.

It is very rare even at non-radar towers for the tower to ask about your altitude. Given that the tower position is not considered a radar position, it has no obligation to verify your Mode C is working correctly, and usually has no functional use for your altitude information anyway.
Last edited by HRutila on Wed Sep 02, 2015 10:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Harold Rutila
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Shinjo B
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Re: Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by Shinjo B »

Thanks all.
Ryan B
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Re: Handover to tower on IFR approach

Post by Ryan B »

Don't forget to state your intentions if doing multiple approaches....

all the above plus "touch and go then ILS xyz full procedure" or whatever.
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