Houston Center passed me to Approach and then to the
final controller for Hobby.
After my student told me we were passing 500 feet, the
final controller announced that I was right of course, going further right of course and asked me to confirm I was in a left turn.
Checking in with my
final controller, I was asked if I wanted a visual approach.
The
final controller was delivered after four weeks, and was controlling two weeks later.
We expect to ask the
final controller for an approach because we have all heard the "Make your request of the next controller," when the request is made too soon.
My pilot continued inbound, and we started our final descent at three miles, down to two miles, then one mile, and at three-quarter mile, the
final controller asked me to call the ball.
On the way in, we'll be sure to ask the
final controller what routing we can expect when departing KHPN for KLGA.
The
final controller called an accurate PAR approach.
The two FA-18s originally had requested a section PAR approach, which was coordinated between the arrival and
final controller, using a scratchpad on the radar scope.
I lined up for the approach just as SoCal switched me to the NASNI
final controller. His initial calls said I was "well right of course," which was confusing, because I could see the runway straight ahead, aligned perfectly off my nose.