A CLRNC COPIED INCORRECTLY; INTERPED WRONG; OR NOT COORDINATED; LEADS TO AN ALT OVERSHOOT NEAR SRQ. FOLLOWED BY HARSH WORDS BTWN CTLR AND PLT WHO HAVE BEEN UNDER THE PRESSURE OF WX DELAYS FOR HRS.

Date: 2000-07 · Aircraft: Regional Jet CL65; Undifferentiated or Other Model

Anomalies: deviation-altitude-overshoot|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-clearance|inflight-event-encounter-weather-turbulence|other-clrnc-interp

Synopsis

A CLRNC COPIED INCORRECTLY; INTERPED WRONG; OR NOT COORDINATED; LEADS TO AN ALT OVERSHOOT NEAR SRQ. FOLLOWED BY HARSH WORDS BTWN CTLR AND PLT WHO HAVE BEEN UNDER THE PRESSURE OF WX DELAYS FOR HRS.

Narrative

DURING A LONG DAY OF TSTMS; WX RERTES AND GND DELAYS; WE WERE ABOUT 20 MINS AWAY FROM OUR THIRD UPDATE FOR OUR FLT FROM SRQ TO MCO. I HAD LEFT THE FO AND WHEN I CAME BACK ON HE ADVISED ME THAT HE HAD GOTTEN A CLRNC AND THE GND STOP HAD BEEN LIFTED. WE BOARDED OUR PAX AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE IN AN ATTEMPT TO GET UNDERWAY BEFORE MCO DECIDED TO STOP INBOUNDS AGAIN. THE FO BRIEFED THE TKOF; OUR CLRNC; AND THE SID. THE SRQ1 SID CALLS FOR AN ALT OF 3000 FT; BUT SAID CLRNC HAD GIVEN US 11000 FT. WHEN TWR HANDED US OFF TO TPA DEP; I SWITCHED FREQ AND MADE THE INITIAL CALL (DEP ACR XXX OUT OF 1500 FT FOR 11000 FT). TPA DIDN'T RESPOND AND THE RADIO WAS SILENT. I MADE ANOTHER CALLOUT OF APPROX 2200 FT -- STILL SILENCE. I LOOKED AT THE CLRNC AND SID TO VERIFY THE FREQ. WHILE DOING THIS; TPA DEP CALLED US TO SEE IF WE WERE WITH HIM. I ANSWERED THAT WE WERE AND WERE OUT OF 5500 FT FOR 11000 FT. THE CTLR REPLIED 'YOU CAN LEVEL AT 6000 FT; THE CLRNC WAS TO 3000 FT.' I CONFIRMED 6000 FT AND SAID CLRNC HAD GIVEN US 11000 FT. THE CTLR SAID SOMETHING ABOUT PULLING THE TAPES IF WE WANTED. I ASKED IF THERE WAS GOING TO BE A PROB; AND THE CTLR RESPONDED NO; BUT COMMENTED THAT WE WERE ARGUMENTATIVE. I DON'T BELIEVE WE WERE; BUT MAYBE IT APPEARED THAT WAY TO HIM. IN ANY CASE; WE SHOULD HAVE CONFIRMED WITH SRQ'S ATC THAT THE INITIAL ALT WE THOUGHT WAS CORRECT SINCE IT DIFFERED FROM THE SID.

More incidents for this aircraft family →

Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.