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Pilot Quality and Network Enjoyment


Adam Arkley

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The quality of many pilots on the network is the subject of much discussion across VATSIM UK and other vACCs, Divisions and Regions. For as far back as I can remember, the topic has been present on a daily basis across VATSIM and I have dealt with my own fair share of well meaning but very new members of the VATSIM network that disrupt my ability to enjoy the network. As a direct result, I have been encouraging people for some time to make better use of the .wallop command whilst controlling, particularly in the en-route environment, whilst also quietly discussing this at more senior levels within VATSIM.

Today, a representative from the Region approached Ben and I to discuss the issue of pilot quality and steps that we are being asked to take moving forwards. The message is simple: across the board, we are being encouraged to make better use of the .wallop command at any time during our controlling. I have already taken steps to ask my training/mentoring teams to ensure that student controllers are taught about appropriate and proper use of the .wallop command during mentoring sessions at all levels and this will propagate to students in due course.

The message to everyone is very clear - if you are controlling (or flying) on the network, and the competence of a pilot falls short of the requirements outlined in Section B8 of the Code of Conduct, please .wallop the pilot. Many that read this will have considered walloping pilots previously but opted not to and I am very keen to understand - either by way of response to this post, by e-mail, by Discord DM or even DM via this forum - to understand why they chose not to. I have made representations to the Region as to why I think that controllers do not commonly .wallop pilots and, quite rightly, I was asked to provide evidence of this. You have my assurances that anything presented to me will be taken to the Region in the right way and I will be asking that your concerns are acted upon.

I will provide assurances on two things: firstly, I have had several discussions with controllers recently whereby they either did .wallop someone, or considered .walloping someone, but realised that there were no supervisors online that could help. My understanding is that all .wallop messages are sent to a Discord server for the awareness of supervisors and I have asked for some months now that people .wallop even in the absence of supervisors; doing so will highlight to the Board of Governors that more supervisors are needed. Secondly, I am aware that additional guidance has been given to Supervisors recently with respect to the appropriate way in which pilots that fall below the expected quality standards should be dealt with. 

This has been a highly debated topic for years and for the first time, we have an open invitation to meaningfully contribute to how the topic is handled. It is incumbent now on each and every one of us, particularly as a high-traffic division, to take this request in the spirit it is intended and ensure that we're helping make the network aware of the breadth and scale of the pilot quality problem - it is not enough to simply debate the issue endlessly in Discord. We must now take action, as has been requested, and shine a spotlight on the problem once and for all.

As always, if anyone has any questions, please let me or another member of the DSG know.

Best regards,
Adam, on behalf of the DSG

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Robert Terrace

Posted

The issue I have with this, and I'll post this here, instead of letting it get lost on Discord, is that a lot of the time, especially when theres no Supervisors online, the person .walloping gets no feedback in one way or another. 

You say that you've been asked by Region (I take it that this is VATEUR) about why controllers do not wallop pilots, from my point of view, there is no regularity of support for controllers/pilots. I get that, like everyone else on VATSIM, SUPs are volunteers, however, when a controller sees on pilot disconnected for poor behaviour/conduct, and this pilot then reconnects and does the same thing, with no recourse, is there any wonder why confidence and support is lower in VATUK?

There used to be an e-mail address where controllers could e-mail supervisors with their concerns, that went to a global inbox, again so that Supervisors could deal with issues that arose when they were not online. I have previously raised concerns about pilots that way, and have had responses saying that things would be dealt with. The last time I tried to e-mail that address, I got a 'not available' return. Has this facility been withdrawn, or is it something the BOG are looking to utilise still.

From our experiences in the UK, we know that poor behaviour increases on the network around school holiday times (not looking to apportion any blame, it just seems to be the case), however, the majority of Supervisors seem to be in different timezones on the opposite side of the world to us, and as such, support again, comes to a minimum. I know there are one or two VATEUD based sups, but, the last I was told, a SUP cannot be online at the same time as their main account (for apparently obvious reasons), and as such, the UK based SUPs are more focussed on controlling, and dealing with poor behaviour after the fact, than being available as SUPs (I cannot blame them for this, I'd do the same in the circumstance).

Perhaps something needs doing from an overall level at VATGOV, as, theres been a lot of great work done promoting events for new pilots, and, from talking to those new pilots on the network, there are plenty that are willing and wanting to increase their expertise, but, are frightened/unsure of how to proceed.

The advent of MSFS2020 (and the coming MSFS2024) seemed to catch VATSIM unaware, even with the 'tie ins' that they got. We don't want to be caught out again.

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Adam Arkley

Posted

Just now, Robert Terrace said:

The issue I have with this, and I'll post this here, instead of letting it get lost on Discord, is that a lot of the time, especially when theres no Supervisors online, the person .walloping gets no feedback in one way or another. 

You say that you've been asked by Region (I take it that this is VATEUR) about why controllers do not wallop pilots, from my point of view, there is no regularity of support for controllers/pilots. I get that, like everyone else on VATSIM, SUPs are volunteers, however, when a controller sees on pilot disconnected for poor behaviour/conduct, and this pilot then reconnects and does the same thing, with no recourse, is there any wonder why confidence and support is lower in VATUK?

There used to be an e-mail address where controllers could e-mail supervisors with their concerns, that went to a global inbox, again so that Supervisors could deal with issues that arose when they were not online. I have previously raised concerns about pilots that way, and have had responses saying that things would be dealt with. The last time I tried to e-mail that address, I got a 'not available' return. Has this facility been withdrawn, or is it something the BOG are looking to utilise still.

From our experiences in the UK, we know that poor behaviour increases on the network around school holiday times (not looking to apportion any blame, it just seems to be the case), however, the majority of Supervisors seem to be in different timezones on the opposite side of the world to us, and as such, support again, comes to a minimum. I know there are one or two VATEUD based sups, but, the last I was told, a SUP cannot be online at the same time as their main account (for apparently obvious reasons), and as such, the UK based SUPs are more focussed on controlling, and dealing with poor behaviour after the fact, than being available as SUPs (I cannot blame them for this, I'd do the same in the circumstance).

Perhaps something needs doing from an overall level at VATGOV, as, theres been a lot of great work done promoting events for new pilots, and, from talking to those new pilots on the network, there are plenty that are willing and wanting to increase their expertise, but, are frightened/unsure of how to proceed.

The advent of MSFS2020 (and the coming MSFS2024) seemed to catch VATSIM unaware, even with the 'tie ins' that they got. We don't want to be caught out again.

Hi Robert,

Thanks for sharing, particularly publicly. Please trust me that I absolutely agree that there is a perception/stigma that if people wallop, nothing will be done and this was my first response to the Region when they brought this to me earlier today. I have long argued that the more we use the .wallop command, the more we illustrate that more supervisors are needed to deal with the problem. Not .walloping because there is a lack of supervisors isa  vicious circle - unless we make reports, there is no evidence that more supervisors are needed! We must take the initiative - as we've been asked - and I strongly encourage you to .wallop when appropriate regardless. As I've said in my original post, all .wallop messages are sent to a central Discord and they absolutely will be seen.

Cheers,
Adam

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Samuel Rey

Posted

One reason I sometimes don't wallop (even when I want to) is workload. When I tend to decide to wallop, it's often because I won't be able to cope with a pilot at all and they need to just be removed (and pointed to some resources later). Having to type out quite a bit of text (so I can't be updating tags, and I can't be typing at talking at the same time) and wait for a response that might be too late anyways often make me just decide to focus on the traffic right now.

 

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Rishab Saddiq

Posted

Sometimes I also think that even if you have the pilots required for a busy session , you need to be sure that they are capable for example a Gatwick ground mentor wants a busy session for the person he/she is mentoring but then to only start realise that the pilot quality isn’t as expected. Are mentors looking at pilot quality constantly now for a more smoother run session?

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Josh Seagrave

Posted

Just now, Rishab Saddiq said:

Sometimes I also think that even if you have the pilots required for a busy session , you need to be sure that they are capable for example a Gatwick ground mentor wants a busy session for the person he/she is mentoring but then to only start realise that the pilot quality isn’t as expected. Are mentors looking at pilot quality constantly now for a more smoother run session?

Not entirely sure this is relevant to the blog post Rish, but yes. Pilot quality concerns are taken into account whilst mentoring.

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Peter Mooney

Posted

Reasons I don't use .wallop (much):

1. Stigma - I don't want to scare off a new/inexperienced pilot. I will generally try to help them as much as possible myself, even if they fall short of the requirements set out in the Code of Conduct. I feel this can be less 'scary' for a pilot than the "Hello, my name is _ I am one of the VATSIM supervisors..."  message arriving in the pilot client with three bleeps. I am also able to communicate over voice with the pilot to explain things better (AFAIK SUPs have to use text where tone etc could be lost).

2. Workload - As mentioned by Samuel, I tend to resort to needing a .wallop when I don't have time to help myself, at which point I'm close to task saturated before having to type out a .wallop, have follow up conversations explaining the situation, what's happened etc.

3. Poor past experiences - When I have reached out to SUPs in the past I haven't always been overly impressed with the responce. Some take so long to do anything about the issue the aircraft has taken off into your arrival stream of their own accord and left your AoR by which point the SUP is like "so they aren't a problem any more". (Note some SUPs have been fantastic and fast acting).

4. Lack of transparency - Perhaps things happen to guide erroneous pilots to resources that I don't get made aware of, but it sometimes feels the SUP is 'fire-fighting' and will disconnect someone in extreme circumstances, but otherwise there are no ramifications/help/support given to the pilot. I don't see what happens apart from sometimes a "I have dealt with the issue".

5. Lack of supervisor availability - SUPs are often not online, as you say these things are logged, but there is (selfishly) little benefit to me to do the .wallop at the time if there's noone to help me, and it will take time away from controlling the competant pilots to do it.

6. Supervisor burden - SUPs are often presumably dealing with multiple problems at once across the VATSIM globe, if I can deal with it myself why burden a SUP?

I do (try) to use .wallop when I think someone is being mallicious or I'm too busy to 'babysit', and following your post will be encourged to use it more.

----

I think most controllers in VATUK have experienced bad or inexperienced pilots. Some controllers handle them better than others. Some SUPs handle them better than others. But are we looking at something which isn't the _root cause_ of the pilot quality issue, that anyone with no training following a very basic muli-choice test (AIUI) can connect as a pilot? Our controllers have hours of required self-study, training and practical exams before they can connect, pilots none. I am grateful this is being discussed, but I think it needs to be reviewed as part of a more hollistic approach to improving pilot quality (hopefully that's the intention!).

P.S. I had a first time pilot on the network the other day who was near perfect! So I don't want to give the impression I'm complaining about 'new pilots' just the ones who don't know left from right.

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Phil Hutchinson

Posted (edited)

2 hours ago, Robert Terrace said:

The issue I have with this, and I'll post this here, instead of letting it get lost on Discord, is that a lot of the time, especially when theres no Supervisors online, the person .walloping gets no feedback in one way or another. 

You say that you've been asked by Region (I take it that this is VATEUR) about why controllers do not wallop pilots, from my point of view, there is no regularity of support for controllers/pilots. I get that, like everyone else on VATSIM, SUPs are volunteers, however, when a controller sees on pilot disconnected for poor behaviour/conduct, and this pilot then reconnects and does the same thing, with no recourse, is there any wonder why confidence and support is lower in VATUK?

There used to be an e-mail address where controllers could e-mail supervisors with their concerns, that went to a global inbox, again so that Supervisors could deal with issues that arose when they were not online. I have previously raised concerns about pilots that way, and have had responses saying that things would be dealt with. The last time I tried to e-mail that address, I got a 'not available' return. Has this facility been withdrawn, or is it something the BOG are looking to utilise still.

From our experiences in the UK, we know that poor behaviour increases on the network around school holiday times (not looking to apportion any blame, it just seems to be the case), however, the majority of Supervisors seem to be in different timezones on the opposite side of the world to us, and as such, support again, comes to a minimum. I know there are one or two VATEUD based sups, but, the last I was told, a SUP cannot be online at the same time as their main account (for apparently obvious reasons), and as such, the UK based SUPs are more focussed on controlling, and dealing with poor behaviour after the fact, than being available as SUPs (I cannot blame them for this, I'd do the same in the circumstance).

Perhaps something needs doing from an overall level at VATGOV, as, theres been a lot of great work done promoting events for new pilots, and, from talking to those new pilots on the network, there are plenty that are willing and wanting to increase their expertise, but, are frightened/unsure of how to proceed.

The advent of MSFS2020 (and the coming MSFS2024) seemed to catch VATSIM unaware, even with the 'tie ins' that they got. We don't want to be caught out again.

The email has been replaced by the VATSIM support system - you can visit https://support.vatsim.net/ and file a report under "Network Supervisors / Incident Report"

On the lack of feedback element, there is supposed to be an FSD message returned when you wallop, to inform you that there are no supervisors online. It should state the following:

Quote

There are currently no Supervisors online. Your request has been sent to the Supervisor Department. If a Supervisor doesn't respond, please keep a copy of all evidence and submit a ticket to the Supervisor Team at support.vatsim.net

If this isn't being displayed when there are no supervisors online, I'll take a note to pick this up and figure out why.

 

 

Edited by Phil Hutchinson
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Dean Gibbs

Posted

I would largely echo Peter’s comments.

i generally only make use of Walloping if I feel I am actually unable to deal with the pilot myself. I’ve probably used it on about 5 pilots in the 3 years I have been controlling. The most recent was a pilot with an open mic that had ignored 3 messages telling them so.

the primary reason is that all you tend to see from it is a delay and then told that they have been removed. This doesn’t feel like it’s really helping a pilot improve and may put off those that genuinely want to learn. I have no real sight as to how supervisors actually engage with the pilots we wallop so it still feels like a bit of a punishment.

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Adam Arkley

Posted

7 hours ago, Phil Hutchinson said:

The email has been replaced by the VATSIM support system - you can visit https://support.vatsim.net/ and file a report under "Network Supervisors / Incident Report"

On the lack of feedback element, there is supposed to be an FSD message returned when you wallop, to inform you that there are no supervisors online. It should state the following:

If this isn't being displayed when there are no supervisors online, I'll take a note to pick this up and figure out why.

 

 

I've never seen this myself, Phil, but I've never correlated it with no supervisors being online. 

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Alice Ford

Posted

I'd also agree with what's been said here. I find that (specifically from a ground-based perspective), I almost always have time to send the pilots some links to help them get started, give them some videos to watch, etc. The times I use `.wallop` on the ground are almost only when either:
- A pilot actively does something to cause a mess, for instance randomly pushing or taxiing without talking to me
- A pilot can't effectively communicate in English (either due to a different first language, or, more commonly, a stuck or broken mic). In these cases what I want to convey is more of a 'please get off the frequency' than 'please get off the network' - they may be a good pilot, they may be willing to learn, but there's pretty much no way I can communicate with them.

Outside these I normally just try to help, however I do understand that that could have ramifications further up the food chain, especially for enroute sectors.

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Robert Terrace

Posted

8 hours ago, Phil Hutchinson said:

The email has been replaced by the VATSIM support system - you can visit https://support.vatsim.net/ and file a report under "Network Supervisors / Incident Report"

On the lack of feedback element, there is supposed to be an FSD message returned when you wallop, to inform you that there are no supervisors online. It should state the following:

If this isn't being displayed when there are no supervisors online, I'll take a note to pick this up and figure out why.

 

 

I've not seen the message come through informing that there are no supervisors online, however, thanks for taking the time out to reply.

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James Bradford

Posted

11 hours ago, Peter Mooney said:

...

1. Stigma - I don't want to scare off a new/inexperienced pilot. I will generally try to help them as much as possible myself, even if they fall short of the requirements set out in the Code of Conduct. I feel this can be less 'scary' for a pilot than the "Hello, my name is _ I am one of the VATSIM supervisors..."  message arriving in the pilot client with three bleeps. I am also able to communicate over voice with the pilot to explain things better (AFAIK SUPs have to use text where tone etc could be lost).

2. Workload - As mentioned by Samuel, I tend to resort to needing a .wallop when I don't have time to help myself, at which point I'm close to task saturated before having to type out a .wallop, have follow up conversations explaining the situation, what's happened etc.

3. Poor past experiences - When I have reached out to SUPs in the past I haven't always been overly impressed with the responce. Some take so long to do anything about the issue the aircraft has taken off into your arrival stream of their own accord and left your AoR by which point the SUP is like "so they aren't a problem any more". (Note some SUPs have been fantastic and fast acting).

4. Lack of transparency - Perhaps things happen to guide erroneous pilots to resources that I don't get made aware of, but it sometimes feels the SUP is 'fire-fighting' and will disconnect someone in extreme circumstances, but otherwise there are no ramifications/help/support given to the pilot. I don't see what happens apart from sometimes a "I have dealt with the issue".

5. Lack of supervisor availability - SUPs are often not online, as you say these things are logged, but there is (selfishly) little benefit to me to do the .wallop at the time if there's noone to help me, and it will take time away from controlling the competant pilots to do it.

6. Supervisor burden - SUPs are often presumably dealing with multiple problems at once across the VATSIM globe, if I can deal with it myself why burden a SUP?

...

Pretty much every reason - especially 1 and 2 - Peter gives is why I sometimes won't use wallop, some anecdotal stuff:

Basically, pilots who need help are scared of supervisors, pilots who cause major disruption are not, and cannot be dealt with in a timely manner by supervisors - which I don't think is an issue with individual SUPs but just the nature of the time sensitivity of most problems that arise, I'm not sure I could do any better than them honestly.

In recent times whilst private messaging inexperienced pilots who I've been assisting - when I'm quiet enough to help but busy enough that there's some delay to my support. I'll let them know they aren't in trouble but I'm going to asking a supervisor to get in contact with them to help them since I'm getting busy and won't be able to respond quickly. The response to this is overwhelmingly negative - often in the form of disconnecting or aggressively apologising to me and asking if they could stick with me instead. Doesn't matter how much I stress they're not going to just be banned.

Overall, I find - as ADC - wallop useless at helping me resolve immediate problems. I need the time immediately after someone does something wacky like slewing across the airport taking off on the opposite direciton runway without a clearance or totally missing the departure procedure track to actually react to what I'm seeing, resolve the conflict and coordinate with other controllers, and then catch up on all the stuff I should've been doing in that time. By the time I've done all that walloping feels redundant, the pilot's flying off into the sunset, possibly even complying with London Controls instructions. I may also have to explain local procedures that the supervisor through no fault of their own is not familiar with that are relevant to a scenario. If the pilots off halfway down their SID I can't even answer the question I get everytime about whether pilot is complying now or not.

Minor point, but explaining the scenario 5 mins later also makes me stew on what happened, and makes it harder to just move on and continue to enjoy my session and not vent at other pilots who're making small mistakes, perhaps a personal failing by me but still relevant.

Maybe the ability of supervisors to more easily use some form of voice communication when talking to controllers would be helpful? (Is controller-controller communication in AFV still planned? something similar to that if it ever appears?) This would remove the text communication delay and resistance, I guess language barriers and such would still be an issue though.

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Adam Arkley

Posted

11 hours ago, Peter Mooney said:

Reasons I don't use .wallop (much):

1. Stigma - I don't want to scare off a new/inexperienced pilot. I will generally try to help them as much as possible myself, even if they fall short of the requirements set out in the Code of Conduct. I feel this can be less 'scary' for a pilot than the "Hello, my name is _ I am one of the VATSIM supervisors..."  message arriving in the pilot client with three bleeps. I am also able to communicate over voice with the pilot to explain things better (AFAIK SUPs have to use text where tone etc could be lost).

2. Workload - As mentioned by Samuel, I tend to resort to needing a .wallop when I don't have time to help myself, at which point I'm close to task saturated before having to type out a .wallop, have follow up conversations explaining the situation, what's happened etc.

3. Poor past experiences - When I have reached out to SUPs in the past I haven't always been overly impressed with the responce. Some take so long to do anything about the issue the aircraft has taken off into your arrival stream of their own accord and left your AoR by which point the SUP is like "so they aren't a problem any more". (Note some SUPs have been fantastic and fast acting).

4. Lack of transparency - Perhaps things happen to guide erroneous pilots to resources that I don't get made aware of, but it sometimes feels the SUP is 'fire-fighting' and will disconnect someone in extreme circumstances, but otherwise there are no ramifications/help/support given to the pilot. I don't see what happens apart from sometimes a "I have dealt with the issue".

5. Lack of supervisor availability - SUPs are often not online, as you say these things are logged, but there is (selfishly) little benefit to me to do the .wallop at the time if there's noone to help me, and it will take time away from controlling the competant pilots to do it.

6. Supervisor burden - SUPs are often presumably dealing with multiple problems at once across the VATSIM globe, if I can deal with it myself why burden a SUP?

I do (try) to use .wallop when I think someone is being mallicious or I'm too busy to 'babysit', and following your post will be encourged to use it more.

----

I think most controllers in VATUK have experienced bad or inexperienced pilots. Some controllers handle them better than others. Some SUPs handle them better than others. But are we looking at something which isn't the _root cause_ of the pilot quality issue, that anyone with no training following a very basic muli-choice test (AIUI) can connect as a pilot? Our controllers have hours of required self-study, training and practical exams before they can connect, pilots none. I am grateful this is being discussed, but I think it needs to be reviewed as part of a more hollistic approach to improving pilot quality (hopefully that's the intention!).

P.S. I had a first time pilot on the network the other day who was near perfect! So I don't want to give the impression I'm complaining about 'new pilots' just the ones who don't know left from right.

Now that I have a bit more time, I want to deal with some of your comments here specifically.

1) I completely agree with the desire to help and on occasions where you have capacity to do so, then that's fine to a degree. But, to directly relate that to 2), 6) and your summary after your numbered list, it's critical that we flag cases where support is required for pilots in order to paint a picture of how the P0 test might leave something to be desired. We cannot complain that P0 is not doing enough whilst simultaneously hiding the extent of the problem. To that end, it isn't our responsibility as controllers to be teaching pilots and I sort of encourage that we stop!

3) I will flag this for attention. This isn't acceptable.

4) I sort of get this; I get notified by a supervisor if someone is removed from the network, generally, However, we have to question the morality of us knowing the ins and outs of every conversation that a supervisor ahs with the subject of a wallop. What I will suggest to the Region is that we get some summary of supervisor actions per period and hopefully this will give people confidence that Supervisors are, in fact, acting.

5) This is the key issue. This is why we must wallop. We have to play the long game - if you wallop and nobody is available and we can demonstrate that routinely, that is evidence to VP SUP that we need more supervisors. It should not become our problem, in any way, that a supervisor is not online to help - VATSIM is a global platform in use throughout the day and it is incumbent on the network to ensure that we have suitable resources in place to ensure the enjoyment of the network for all involved.

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Phil Gates

Posted

As a fairly new controller, it took me a while to appreciate why it was a good idea to use .wallop with less than proficient pilots, and it was largely down to @Adam Arkleyinsistence on Discord that made me confident to use it. 

However, the response from supervisors, when online, has not filled me with confidence, and the impression I currently sit with is that they view their job as done if/when the problem pilot disconnects. I appreciate I don't see what they may, or may not, do subsequently, but more than once the supervisor has taken a while to respond and their response has been "they've disconnected now so have a good session". 

It would be reassuring if there was some form of feedback that let controllers know that something was done with these miscreant pilots. I appreciate we wouldn't get (nor would I want) chapter and verse of what was done, but some form of feedback would be good. 

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Matthew Owen

Posted

My reasons behind shying away from using .wallop often are mainly the response I’ve got from some supervisors they usually fall into two categories; 

1. I’ve typed out a detailed .wallop while busy in the hope that the supervisor can just deal with the situation, but then I receive a message saying hi and asking how they can help/what the problem is. 9/10 my reply is retyping what I said in the .wallop string. this is frustrating when you’re busy and a pilot is still causing issues. 
 

2. Just a lack of help from the supervisor, more often than not if someone is ignoring .contactmes on the ground and just freely taxiing and departing the response from the Sup by the time they arrive is that they’re no longer causing an issue as they’re in the air with no area controllers on so nobody to upset - but we all know if they’ve not spoken to ground or tower then they’re not going to use Unicom and they’re not going to speak to the controllers at their destination. 

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Phil Hutchinson

Posted

17 hours ago, Adam Arkley said:

I've never seen this myself, Phil, but I've never correlated it with no supervisors being online. 

 

16 hours ago, Robert Terrace said:

I've not seen the message come through informing that there are no supervisors online, however, thanks for taking the time out to reply.

Just tried it out myself when I knew there weren't any online and it does work - its possible that Euroscope shows it in the SERVER tab of the chat, rather than in the active SUP window which pops up when you issue .wallop

 

image.png.139449d039761760d08571e9efcb68e8.png

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Paul Walker

Posted

I wonder if there's any stigma/misunderstanding associated with the name of the command? I often see talk of "walloping" someone, which kinda implies something other than getting help. I don't know if this sometimes gives an impression that it, and the supervisors it invokes, are there for getting someone into trouble/kicked off/banned rather than to provide support and assistance? I think it's an unfortunate clash between the English language and what I understand to be derived from an IRC command. Perhaps something like .sup would have fewer connotations.

As a new S1, I've felt like it had to be quite a high bar to justify .wallop - seeing this forum post has encouraged me to use it where I might not have done previously.

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Samuel Lefevre

Posted (edited)

Just so those monitoring this post see this, a pilot didn't wait any longer than 3 minutes for any form or clearance or instruction but was not patient enough, departed on Unicom so therefore I couldn't even talk to them on the freq. For additional context this pilot was departing from EGBB and I was on Central, there was an East Midlands Radar and a TC Essex at around 1330 local time today, so the sector was no where near overloaded. I called a supervisor to which they allowed me to get back in touch with the pilot but seems that no punishment was put on the pilot at all. I then had a ridiculous argument with them over PM which I admit, I shouldn't have got involved in. But the pilot claimed they waited over 5 minutes for clearance which was a blatant lie, the logs I saved proved that they didn't wait any longer for 3 minutes for anything (or 3 minutes and 18 seconds). Here is what I sent: 

Quote

My final say is the logs, you requested clearance at [12:26:55] and received it at [12:30:09], you requested push at [12:39:06] and received it at [12:39:37]. You requested taxi at [12:44:30] and received it at [12:46:11], you reported ready for takeoff at [12:49:27] and then departed and didn't give me a chance.

I noticed they just departed when I was about to get back to them at time 1253z! I think the key thing that got to me here is the gross and blatant violation of the CoC with 0 repercussions, the pilot LITERALLY got away with doing whatever they wanted!

Also, the way SUPs deal with things is so inconsistent. Sometimes you get someone who just responds "on it" and the plane disappears from the radar. And other times the pilot just stays there and the SUP at best has a word with them. That then sets the idea to these sorts of pilots that they can depart without talking to ATC, all they get is a word from a SUP but they still get to fly even though they just blatantly violated the CoC (like this isn't an issue with "new pilots," experienced pilots tend to do this more, because they know they can get away with it) and skipped the waiting bit!

I do hope that with the spotlight on pilot quality these issues can addressed, and overall the quality on the sector for everyone else was acceptable, it's just this one pilot that can ruin it (or "knacker your evening") by just doing whatever they fancy.

Edited by Samuel Lefevre
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Robert Terrace

Posted

17 hours ago, Paul Walker said:

I wonder if there's any stigma/misunderstanding associated with the name of the command? I often see talk of "walloping" someone, which kinda implies something other than getting help. I don't know if this sometimes gives an impression that it, and the supervisors it invokes, are there for getting someone into trouble/kicked off/banned rather than to provide support and assistance? I think it's an unfortunate clash between the English language and what I understand to be derived from an IRC command. Perhaps something like .sup would have fewer connotations.

As a new S1, I've felt like it had to be quite a high bar to justify .wallop - seeing this forum post has encouraged me to use it where I might not have done previously.

I think thats a lot of it. 

From talking to the newer controllers during events and other things, there appears to be a reluctance to use .wallop, now whether this is because they don't have a complete understanding of what happens when the command is sent, they're not sure of how much a Supervisor can do, or, they don't want to get anyone into trouble.

Unfortunately, the word 'SUPERVISOR' does a lot of the heavy lifting here. People see/hear that, and are immediately on the defensive, I've seen posts on social media and other sites where pilots have had Sups called on them, and, they're immediately defensive and more 'I know how to fly my aircraft, I should be left alone', than, 'I welcome the support'.

Perhaps an education towards both pilots and controllers is something that is needed, I know there have been efforts made in the past to try and help everyone understand the remit of a SUP and how they can support people, but, perhaps a change of title to 'Online Support', but still using the SUP callsign could change the image that some people have of the group.

 

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Phil Hutchinson

Posted

19 hours ago, Paul Walker said:

I wonder if there's any stigma/misunderstanding associated with the name of the command? I often see talk of "walloping" someone, which kinda implies something other than getting help. I don't know if this sometimes gives an impression that it, and the supervisors it invokes, are there for getting someone into trouble/kicked off/banned rather than to provide support and assistance? I think it's an unfortunate clash between the English language and what I understand to be derived from an IRC command. Perhaps something like .sup would have fewer connotations.

As a new S1, I've felt like it had to be quite a high bar to justify .wallop - seeing this forum post has encouraged me to use it where I might not have done previously.

"wallop" is short for "write all operators" - its origin was from IRC back in the 80s and 90s. 🙂

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Jerry Betteridge

Posted

This is really interesting.  Some great points.  I'm not a controller so forgive my six penn'orth. As a pilot I find the behaviour and low competence of some others frustrating and annoying.

If all the points above,  a couple really strike me as important. 

First,  that wallop is an inherently aggressive term and that maybe Sup, or Help or something similar would be better suited to the situation if we're trying to maintain a positive environment and have a good effect.

Second,  that supporting your team is a fundamental part of good leadership and I detect a lack of confidence in parts of the Vatsim system in this thread.  I'm very glad that Adam is taking a strong lead here,  and hope the powers that be take this seriously and act.

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Paul Walker

Posted

1 hour ago, Phil Hutchinson said:

"wallop" is short for "write all operators" - its origin was from IRC back in the 80s and 90s. 🙂

Yeah, that was my understanding of the term, but as I say, whether that's the way everyone understands it, I'm not always so sure. It's commonly worked into sentences in such a way as to imply the other meaning

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Adam Bass

Posted

I completely agree with everything that's been said so far.

Personally I've always been very reluctant to wallop pilots, apart from those egregiously breaking the code of conduct or intentionally trolling, because of the negative perception. We're obviously reliant on there being a good number of knowledgeable  pilots on the network to control, otherwise we'd be wasting our time. I'm always conscious that pilot's that are sub-standard today could become consummate pros with a bit of time and practice provided they're not put off flying on the network. Of course that practice doesn't have to be, and sometimes shouldn't be, on the network.

I think the reason I'm so hesitant to wallop is because it's seen as something overwhelmingly negative and so I feel using it carries a non-negligible risk of permanently turning pilots away from flying online. The terminology (supervisors, wallop, the standard "I'm one of VATSIM's supervisors..." message etc) are somewhat threatening and you commonly hear of supervisors in relation to them having kicked or banned a pilot which is likely to further intimidate new pilots. I also think there's a bit of a natural power imbalance between controllers and pilots given controllers are essentially there to tell pilot's what to do and to my knowledge the wallop is utilised significantly more by controllers against pilots than the reverse. This makes sense given the high barrier to entry and threshold of capability that controllers are held to but it feeds into a possible perception that supervisors are there to help controllers deal with 'irritating' pilots rather than to help the pilots themselves. Therefore, when a controller mentions that they will or in fact does call a supervisor to help or otherwise deal with a pilot, it would be understandable that the pilot might think they're in trouble and that their vatsim account could in jeopardy. Of course, when a controller wallops a pilot, they often do need a rapid resolution which makes this a difficult problem to solve.

Just completely off the top of my head, and I appreciate this can't happen short term so perhaps isn't what you're looking for, but if we're going to be walloping more frequently for smaller issues, maybe there could be an alternative to a wallop? A different command which is broadcast to supervisors but indicates that a pilot isn't causing an urgent and significant problem but just needs assistance that I as the controller might not have time to give while the wallop could remain for the more disciplinary related situations requiring an immediate resolution. This might also help to get away from some of the stigma currently associated with being walloped.

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Lee Rowlands

Posted

As a fairly new S1, I've used .wallop around 4 times with pilots who taxi on their own accord or are not capable of reading back instructions/clearances and then affect other pilots as my time is spent on the pilot issue.

I have to say that a Sup has connected everytime, asked again the problem (another type up) and I've left it with them with a comeback of "It's been resolved" with a couple of sentences by the Sup that they've advised to go to observer mode and listen to the frequency or they've  disconnected them. 

I agree from others, a summary of what the Sup has done would help and improve confidence with controllers when requesting a Sup of how it's been dealt with. 

Voice contact with the Sup would certainly assist (where applicable/language) in quickly passing the info over and then being able to concentrate on the other pilots without them being held up as its others that are affected.

If it's quiet, I have no issues in giving advice to new/lack of confidence pilots (as we all started there at somepoint) to boost their confidence and wanting them to keep coming back to VatUK but the general standard when starting on Vatsim needs improvement. 

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Peter Mooney

Posted

Having had this discussion, I'd been planning to keep tabs on how many 'infractions' I typically get, and submit them 'en-masse' to the SUPs to help raise awareness of the scale of the issue (which I think was Adam's aim). I didn't think .wallop -ing someone for taxiing the wrong taxiway to the wrong gate appropriate, since by that point they're not impacting anyone else and was probably a genuine mistake (we all make them). Anyway, when I looked into how I'd submit this I see "VATSIM does not have interest in policing petty matters on the network. Issues that are minor violations or personal in nature, should not be reported via this ticketing system. Reports should not be made unless evidence is available & provided to support the allegations."

I don't have evidence I told a pilot to taxi left not right. I can't evidence that they went the wrong way.

I had a poor pilot ruin my flight earlier, I wrote a lengthy .wallop, sent it - no SUPs online. Directed to the ticketting system, but how can I prove they weren't complying with ATC's instructions and getting in everyone's way and using frequency inappropriately? Feeling frustrated.

I want to help raise awareness of the issue but it seems from reading that SUPs don't want to know.

P.S. averaging >2 CoC breaches per session so far. And that's just quiet ADC stuff.

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