by G-HEVN » Thu May 24, 2007 11:31 pm
QFE is only really useful when you are going to land at a relatively low altitude airfield (or for doing circuits). It's common in the UK, and when contacting a tower for joining instructions, you will commonly be given the QFE (bigger airports give QNH, but will still give QFE on request). When departing, if your intention is to leave the circuit, you will be given QNH rather than QFE.
QFE is useless beyond the immediate environs of the airfield that issued it.
At the high airports mentioned, it may be impossible to set a QFE, because the altimeter subscale simply will not go that far (try it, and see how close you can get it to zero), so you are forced to use QNH. Given a situation where you have to use QNH at some airfields, it's a reasonable attitude to say 'use QNH at all airfields'.
Instrument rated pilots will find all their approach etc charts in QNH, so it's a real pain having to switch to QFE for the landing and then switch back to QNH on a missed approach (not to mention an easy fail if you miss it on the check ride!), so increasingly, even in the UK, QFE is being used less and less.
Obviously, when using QNH, you need to know the field elevation. When using QFE, you know the field is at zero feet.