Vancouver airport is a class C airport. The 7nm control zone (C) extends to
2500ft ASL and is surrounded by a TCA extending up to 16'000ft. The TCA is
class C transponder airspace below 12'500ft, then B above that.
As the TCA is merged with that of Victoria the shape is extremely irregular.
See VFR Terminal chart for a close up of the Vancouver control zone.
Squawk Codes
Frequencies
| Callsign | Voice Callsign | Frequency | Airspace |
|---|---|---|---|
| CYVR_TWR | Vancouver Tower | 118.70 | 7nm Control zone to 300ft ASL. |
| CYVR_GND | Vancouver Ground | 121.70 | All taxiways, excluding aprons. |
| CYVR_DEL | Vancouver Clearance | 121.40 | None |
Noise abatement procedures
Such procedures exist at Vancouver. See CAP.
Clearances
No outbound routing restrictions has been defined yet. Make sure the route is a preferred route according to the CFS, if there is one. Otherwise, use your best judgment. Keep in mind the multiple other airports around.
Because the volume of traffic in Vancouver is big enough, there is no need to request clearances from the terminal or ACC. Therefore, the prefix "ATC clears" must not be used.
Ground
Standard ground procedures apply.
Tower
Runway configurations
All runways are available for arrival and departures. See noise abatement procedures for any restrictions.
Departures
Use standard separations for departures and take that responsability.
Besides providing the radar/wake turbulence separation between departures, the Tower controller must ensure that the initial separation between aircraft does not decrease. Factors such as aircraft performance and pilot technique vary even in the real world so be wary when attempting to run departures with minimum spacing, especially when departing a jet behind a prop, even if their wake category are the same.
IFR traffic is handed off to "Departures" with the take-off clearance.
Arrivals
Though it is a responsibility of the TCU/ACC to provide the appropriate separation between successive arrivals on final approach, responsibility for spacing between arriving aircraft may be transferred to the Tower once the aircraft crosses the Final Approach Fix (FAF).
With the use of radar the Tower assumes control of arrivals at the FAF regardless of the weather conditions. See MANOPS section 362.5 for the proper control transfer procedures.If using IvAi in conjunction with FS to operate a visual tower viewpoint you may decrease the 3 nm separation of aircraft on final provided both aircraft are in sight. Aircraft conducting visual approaches in accordance with MANOPS section 566 and 567 are responsible for maintaining their own separation.
On Arrival traffic will be handed off to Tower once established on the approach (or any leg for visual approaches) prior to entering the control zone. If TCU/ACC is offline, make sure the aircraft calls you in advance so you can start managing separation between other traffic as needed.
VFR traffic
Routing restrictions exist in Vancouver complex airspace. On IVAO however, it is up to the pilot to decide if he wants to follow them or not.Arrivals
VFR traffic will be transferred to tower approximately prior to entering the control zone.Departures
Restrictions should only be applied for separation with other IFR traffic. There are no pre-defined guidelines.