Narrative:

I was sic (second in command) pilot flying in the left seat during a passenger flight to trm; the weather was severe clear (day) with ASOS reporting calm winds. We planned/briefed a visual approach to runway 35 because our direction of arrival from the north set us up nicely for a 45 degree left downwind entry and that runway had an instrument approach with vertical guidance (LNAV+V). We cancelled IFR at about 12 miles and entered the downwind as briefed. My partner made our first radio call on CTAF at about 10 miles announcing our intentions. One aircraft replied stating that he had just departed runway 17 and was clearing the pattern to the east. No other aircraft replied. My partner made three subsequent calls on CTAF announcing our position and intended landing on 35: entering downwind; mid-field downwind and turning base. There were no replies and no other aircraft transmitted on CTAF. About halfway through our base leg; we heard an aircraft announce that he was taking runway 17 for takeoff. My partner immediately replied that we were about to turn final on runway 35. There was no reply. My partner again asked the other aircraft where they were and again there was no answer. Not knowing what this other aircraft was doing; we executed a missed approach at about 700 feet as we should have been turning final. We started a climb to pattern altitude (1500 feet) and I offset to the right side of the runway to clear the departure path and set up for a left downwind to runway 17. Climbing through approximately 1300 feet; we got a TCAS RA (climb). As I was executing the RA; I saw a single engine cessna pass about 500 feet below us. After avoiding the traffic; we entered a left downwind for 17 and made an uneventful landing. I did not hear this aircraft make any CTAF calls other than the one announcing that they were taking 17. After disembarking the passengers; the FBO line crew told us that they saw the entire thing happen. They went on to say that the offending aircraft was based at trm. This event would not have occurred had the pilot used proper communication procedures.

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Original NASA ASRS Text

Title: EMB505 Flight crew experiences an airborne conflict during a visual approach to Runway 35 at TRM. The crew made position reports during pattern entry; downwind and base. As they are about to turn final a Cessna announces entering Runway 17 for departure and does not respond to requests from the EMB505 crew to allow them to land first. A go-around is initiated and a TCAS RA is complied with.

Narrative: I was SIC (Second in Command) Pilot Flying in the left seat during a passenger flight to TRM; the weather was severe clear (day) with ASOS reporting calm winds. We planned/briefed a visual approach to runway 35 because our direction of arrival from the north set us up nicely for a 45 degree left downwind entry and that runway had an instrument approach with vertical guidance (LNAV+V). We cancelled IFR at about 12 miles and entered the downwind as briefed. My partner made our first radio call on CTAF at about 10 miles announcing our intentions. One aircraft replied stating that he had just departed runway 17 and was clearing the pattern to the east. No other aircraft replied. My partner made three subsequent calls on CTAF announcing our position and intended landing on 35: entering downwind; mid-field downwind and turning base. There were no replies and no other aircraft transmitted on CTAF. About halfway through our base leg; we heard an aircraft announce that he was taking runway 17 for takeoff. My partner immediately replied that we were about to turn final on runway 35. There was no reply. My partner again asked the other aircraft where they were and again there was no answer. Not knowing what this other aircraft was doing; we executed a missed approach at about 700 feet as we should have been turning final. We started a climb to pattern altitude (1500 feet) and I offset to the right side of the runway to clear the departure path and set up for a left downwind to runway 17. Climbing through approximately 1300 feet; we got a TCAS RA (climb). As I was executing the RA; I saw a single engine Cessna pass about 500 feet below us. After avoiding the traffic; we entered a left downwind for 17 and made an uneventful landing. I did not hear this aircraft make any CTAF calls other than the one announcing that they were taking 17. After disembarking the passengers; the FBO line crew told us that they saw the entire thing happen. They went on to say that the offending aircraft was based at TRM. This event would not have occurred had the pilot used proper communication procedures.

Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.