TR wrote:Please review the previous posts in this thread, specifically my post from 2/24. It is called "MILITARY OPERATIONS AREA" for a reason...stick your nose in there when it's HOT without communication with the controlling agency and the result may not be what you intended. When using this special use airspace, the military aircraft in there are working. Although they are monitoring the frequency of the controlling agency, they are also communicating with other participants on other radios. Differing airframes have differing comm configurations based on mission requirements. The A-10, which I flew for the bulk of my military career, has UHF, VHF AM, and VHF FM and it is not uncommon to be communicating on all three with mission participants. Flying military aircraft, specifically fighters during mission employment is a level of operations that cannot be comprehended by those not qualified to do so. Special Use Airspace is the place we get to practice the mission with time and fuel very limited. It's not entitlement, it's our job. When you trundle through the airspace without coordination, military training will cease. Long lost count on how many times we "held high" in the YUKON MOA because someone thought getting the TP and tampons out to the village was more important than the military training being accomplished. This during a Red Flag with airspace NOTAM'ed "high intensity military aircraft surface to FL500". It's quite simple, avoid the active window or coordinate. BTW, I also worked the Yukon MOA's as well as most of the other special use airspace in Alaska in my 180 and Cub for 15 years and NEVER had a conflict with military aircraft. The reason is simple...Communication and coordination.
TR
So, how are we supposed to communicate with the controlling agency when the military singularly refuses to install communications equipment in or around MOAs for this purpose? Yes, many of the smaller SUAs do have comms available, but consider the Powder River MOAs in eastern Montana, North and South Dakota?
In fact, in most of THOSE SUAs, the military aircraft also are not communicating with the controlling agency, because they too are out of range of any receivers.
And, "go around" one of those MOAs?? I don't carry enough gas to go around the Powder River MOAs. And, gas stations are kinda few out there. Those MOAs are hundreds of miles on each side.
The ONLY reason the Eastern Alaska MOA Complex (which includes the Yukon MOAs) have communications out in the airspace, and that Eielson Range Control provides information to everyone, military and civilian, is because the civilian aviators WANTED to communicate with the military out there, but there was no way to do so, and the Air Force steadfastly refused. Senator Stevens explained in no uncertain terms to the AF that if they wanted those MOAs enlarged, they'd need to provide communications outlets out IN those huge MOAs, and the Air Force did so. That system has worked extremely well, and helped to avoid a lot of disruptions. You seem to forget that villagers in Eagle have just as much right to travel through that airspace as does the military.....whenever they choose to do so. In my experience, after the AF provided communications out there, most pilots used the service.
But, convince the Air Force to install communications capabilties out in the Dakotas and Montana? Radio silence. The only way to communicate with their controllers out there is via phone. If you have cell coverage. The military aircraft, at least the ones at the altitudes where we're apt to meet them, can't communicate with the controlling authority either, over most of those huge MOAs.