LAX Bravo Transitions
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 12:11 am
I'm studying/practicing for V3 and a few questions have popped up for me regarding the Bravo transitions:
Say we've departed KSNA to the NW heading towards LAX and (as in the transcript) once clear of the KSNA Charlie we climb and maintain 3000' heading towards the Vincent Thomas bridge with the intention of flying the Coastal Route transition. I'm a bit confused about where to make the call to SoCal approach. In the transcript they're only 5 miles SE of LAX. After contacting SoCal, they're assigned 6,500'. In the C-172SP that I fly, I cannot reach 6500' by the time I reach the VOR if I make the call at 5 miles SE. Can I make the call to SoCal approach earlier, perhaps over the Vincent Thomas bridge? Asked another way, at what point should I be at 6500' if that is my assigned altitude?
Now assume we've exited the Coastal transition on the north and descended back down to 3000' in the south end of the San Fernando Valley around Sepulveda Pass. We decide to fly the Mini-Route back to the SE. At 3000' we're well below the Bravo shelf so that's not an issue. The altitude specified for the transition is 2500'. Since this is below the top of the SMO Delta airspace, am I correct in assuming I should start the Mini-Route coordination through SMO at 5 miles or so to the North of the SMO airport, perhaps even right over the Sepulveda Pass itself (which is about 6 miles from SMO)?
On a related note, the Mini-Route transition altitude is 2500' for BOTH directions (SE and NW). How does this work in practice when aircraft are transitioning in both directions at the same time?
Finally, back when I was flying in the real world out of VNY (back in the Mesozoic era when the airspace around LAX was still called a TCA rather than Class B), there was only one VFR route that I remember which was just called the LAX "VFR corridor". It ran directly over the center of the airport and was flown at 3500' SE bound, and 2500' NW bound (if my memory from 30 years ago serves...). By convention, you kept the tower on your left as you passed over the airport whichever direction you were going. The old "VFR Corridor" resembles the "Special Flight Rules Area" transition now, except for the NW altitude (and maybe I mis-remember that). There is no mention in the new procedure of "lanes" (i.e., of keeping the tower to your left). Instead, it indicates that the SMO 132 radial should be tracked. Does the new procedure rely solely on altitude separation for opposite-direction aircraft, or does the "keep LAX tower on your left" convention still apply?
Boy, oh boy -- this is fun stuff!
-M.
Say we've departed KSNA to the NW heading towards LAX and (as in the transcript) once clear of the KSNA Charlie we climb and maintain 3000' heading towards the Vincent Thomas bridge with the intention of flying the Coastal Route transition. I'm a bit confused about where to make the call to SoCal approach. In the transcript they're only 5 miles SE of LAX. After contacting SoCal, they're assigned 6,500'. In the C-172SP that I fly, I cannot reach 6500' by the time I reach the VOR if I make the call at 5 miles SE. Can I make the call to SoCal approach earlier, perhaps over the Vincent Thomas bridge? Asked another way, at what point should I be at 6500' if that is my assigned altitude?
Now assume we've exited the Coastal transition on the north and descended back down to 3000' in the south end of the San Fernando Valley around Sepulveda Pass. We decide to fly the Mini-Route back to the SE. At 3000' we're well below the Bravo shelf so that's not an issue. The altitude specified for the transition is 2500'. Since this is below the top of the SMO Delta airspace, am I correct in assuming I should start the Mini-Route coordination through SMO at 5 miles or so to the North of the SMO airport, perhaps even right over the Sepulveda Pass itself (which is about 6 miles from SMO)?
On a related note, the Mini-Route transition altitude is 2500' for BOTH directions (SE and NW). How does this work in practice when aircraft are transitioning in both directions at the same time?
Finally, back when I was flying in the real world out of VNY (back in the Mesozoic era when the airspace around LAX was still called a TCA rather than Class B), there was only one VFR route that I remember which was just called the LAX "VFR corridor". It ran directly over the center of the airport and was flown at 3500' SE bound, and 2500' NW bound (if my memory from 30 years ago serves...). By convention, you kept the tower on your left as you passed over the airport whichever direction you were going. The old "VFR Corridor" resembles the "Special Flight Rules Area" transition now, except for the NW altitude (and maybe I mis-remember that). There is no mention in the new procedure of "lanes" (i.e., of keeping the tower to your left). Instead, it indicates that the SMO 132 radial should be tracked. Does the new procedure rely solely on altitude separation for opposite-direction aircraft, or does the "keep LAX tower on your left" convention still apply?
Boy, oh boy -- this is fun stuff!
-M.