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Pure Bull Shit.It sounds like the JFK controller was messing with AirChina knowing he was having a problem understanding. He shouldn't have included that clearance phrase "have they cleared you into the ramp?" within the question. Not necessarily threatening in that situation, but ask something like it around a runway or taxiway and it has accident/incident written all over it.
Pure Bull Shit.
That is a standard question asked by Ground controllers at every major airport using the exact same phraseology.
ICAO requires that the Air China pilots be fluent in English. If they aren't, they should not be flying here.
Another "informed" response by the uninformed....:icon_rage
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BigIron,
ATC is the equivelent to a minor for me, I've taken the required classes, studied and passed all the material the FAA has mandated us to know to begin training in OK City. I'd be going there if I wasn't contracted Navy. Before I posted I discussed it with a ground/local controller and he said the same thing. Including a clearance phrase without actually giving the clearance is a no no. It may be done, but shouldn't. This isn't life threatening obviously, so it probably happens more often and it's quicker. I am aware pilots must KNOW ATC lingo in english, but that doesn't mean they understand misleading questions. This is an unlikely scenario, but what if ground/local/CD was to ask the pilot something along the lines that include "clear for takeoff". It seems ridiculous, but it's been done and the pilot takes off, that's why we have order 7110.65 from the FAA.
Sorry Big Iron, I didn't realize it was HAL that said my post was bull shit and I was misinformed. I was clarifying my position and the backing I have from an Air Traffic Controllers POV. I'm not trying to ruffle any of your feathers. I realize HAL's name and his career, I've paid attention to many of his posts and I was respectfully disagreeing with him. My point is that ambiguity in lingo is a bad thing, no matter who's fault it is. The job of the controller is to minimize it as much as possible. My first post simply pointed out that after this controller recognized this guy had problems understanding, he made things more difficult by asking a question in an ambiguous way and then asking it again the exact way. If that guy rolls and collides with another aircraft, whose fault is it? Does it matter? There was still a breakdown in communication. It doesn't matter how things "usually are done", it's how they are supposed to be done. Our textbooks are the operating procedures. We aren't learning theory. It's cut and dry, do this, don't do that, direct from the FAA. What individual controllers do once fully certified and on there own is one thing, but when an accident/incident occurs, you're judged by the tape and how you did your job based on what the manual says to the T.
That's correct BigIron, ground doesn't control the ramp so I understand the NEED for the question and the answer he needed. If he didn't get it then he'd have to be sent to the penalty box to wait for things to clear. Perhaps it'd be best asked, AirChina do you have a gate available? AirChina is your ramp clear? We take for granted intonation and word emphasis in English here in America, but a Chinese person that knows ATC communication but little else english will obviously have difficulties, as seen here. If that controller wants to say that to an American pilot fine, that works and it's very likely he'll understand it. Otherwise, it can be misleading, and that was the intent of my post.
v/r,