![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Matt Whiting wrote:
Andrew Sarangan wrote: I could see flyovers being illegal under two FARs - minimum safe altitude, as well as careless and reckless. Regardless of legality, they are totally unnecessary and unsafe. The outcome of this flight demonstrates that point. They aren't unsafe any more than any other aspect of flying is unsafe. They may or may not be necessary, all depends on the circumstances. They are necessary if you are inspecting a field that is short, soft and/or unknown to you as part of your pre-landing activities. Many flight instruction guides specifically recommend this in these cases. Matt I think we are talking about different things here. Go-arounds, circling approaches, low pass for inspecting the runway, and slow flight one foot above the runway are all well-intended useful maneuvers. I do them, and I teach them. May be I misunderstood the article, but the phrase "fly over" in the article implied a highspeed pass over the runway. This is what I was referring to as unnecessary and unsafe. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mustang requesting fly-by. Sorry Mustang, the pattern is
closed. "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... | Matt Whiting wrote: | Andrew Sarangan wrote: | I could see flyovers being illegal under two FARs - minimum safe | altitude, as well as careless and reckless. Regardless of legality, | they are totally unnecessary and unsafe. The outcome of this flight | demonstrates that point. | | They aren't unsafe any more than any other aspect of flying is unsafe. | They may or may not be necessary, all depends on the circumstances. | They are necessary if you are inspecting a field that is short, soft | and/or unknown to you as part of your pre-landing activities. Many | flight instruction guides specifically recommend this in these cases. | | Matt | | I think we are talking about different things here. Go-arounds, | circling approaches, low pass for inspecting the runway, and slow | flight one foot above the runway are all well-intended useful | maneuvers. I do them, and I teach them. May be I misunderstood the | article, but the phrase "fly over" in the article implied a highspeed | pass over the runway. This is what I was referring to as unnecessary | and unsafe. | |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim Macklin wrote:
Mustang requesting fly-by. Sorry Mustang, the pattern is closed. Wasn't that Maverick? ![]() -- Peter |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
See my email...
Dodge City asked for a fly-by when we brought one of the first Beechjets by, something about 200 kts at 50 feet is neat. I feel the need, the need for speed. "Peter R." wrote in message ... | Jim Macklin wrote: | | Mustang requesting fly-by. Sorry Mustang, the pattern is | closed. | | Wasn't that Maverick? ![]() | | -- | Peter |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Who are you quoting? Who used the word "illegal"?
Bob Gardner "Owen Hiller" wrote in message ... I had no idea that a flyover of the runway was illegal. But here you go: "After making two flyovers - a common, but illegal maneuver in which the pilot flies low over the runway - he made the five-minute flight to Rountree where he normally purchased fuel, said airport employees. According to an investigator with the Federal Aviation Administration, before landing, he conducted another flyover, but stalled, crashing nose-down just beyond the tree line in an open field east of the runway. The crash was reported at approximately 8 a.m. by a resident who saw the wreckage as he left for work, according Hartselle Police." "Veteran-flyer Tom Coggin, 67, of Cullman, died instantly when his RV-6, two-seater aircraft crashed on private property near Rountree Field, Hartselle's municipal airstrip." "Deadly Flight" - Cullman Times July 25 2006 http://www.cullmantimes.com/homepage...picturestor y |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Bob Gardner" wrote:
Who are you quoting? Who used the word "illegal"? Since Owen included the link to the article written by an "Evan Belanger" of "The Cullman Times," that appears to be the source of the quote. Bob Gardner "Owen Hiller" wrote in message ... I had no idea that a flyover of the runway was illegal. But here you go: "After making two flyovers - a common, but illegal maneuver in which the pilot flies low over the runway - he made the five-minute flight to Rountree where he normally purchased fuel, said airport employees. According to an investigator with the Federal Aviation Administration, before landing, he conducted another flyover, but stalled, crashing nose-down just beyond the tree line in an open field east of the runway. The crash was reported at approximately 8 a.m. by a resident who saw the wreckage as he left for work, according Hartselle Police." "Veteran-flyer Tom Coggin, 67, of Cullman, died instantly when his RV-6, two-seater aircraft crashed on private property near Rountree Field, Hartselle's municipal airstrip." "Deadly Flight" - Cullman Times July 25 2006 http://www.cullmantimes.com/homepage...37.html?keywor d=leadpicturestory |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Peter R. wrote: Jim Macklin wrote: Mustang requesting fly-by. Sorry Mustang, the pattern is closed. Wasn't that Maverick? ![]() -- Peter I think it was "Negative Ghost Rider, the pattern is full." Interesting article at: http://www.southern-aviator.com/edit...olumn&-nothing When are VFR low approaches at uncontrolled airports legal? Alan Armstrong 8/1/2001 Excerpt from near the end: Despite the two rulings, pilots should realize that currently there is nothing in the FARs to warn you that conducting a "low approach" will only be deemed appropriate if the airport or runway is one upon which your aircraft can land. Neither is there anything in the Airport Operations Provisions section of the Aeronautical Information Manual, which actually sanctions low approaches. Nothing is said, either, in the Air Traffic Control Handbook. There is also no consistency between the provisions of the Aeronautical Information Manual and the FARs, since FAR § 91.119 only permits descent below a safe altitude if the aircraft is in the process of takeoff or landing. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
oups.com... I think we are talking about different things here. Go-arounds, circling approaches, low pass for inspecting the runway, and slow flight one foot above the runway are all well-intended useful maneuvers. I do them, and I teach them. May be I misunderstood the article, but the phrase "fly over" in the article implied a highspeed pass over the runway. This is what I was referring to as unnecessary and unsafe. But you also claimed that the minimum safe altitude regulation applies. I don't see how it does, if all the other low-altitude maneuvers are legal ("low pass for inspecting the runway", "slow flight one foot above the runway", and a missed approach as part of a practice IFR approach in which a landing was never intended as specific examples...the others you mentioned could be argued as part of a landing). "Careless or reckless" is, as we should all know, the catch-all the FAA uses for pretty much any operation they don't like. It's no surprise that rule might be invoked. When an accident happens as a result of a pilot doing something out of the ordinary, the FAA will usually invoke that rule. But that doesn't make a specific operation illegal; it mainly just makes crashing during a specific operation illegal. Given that low-pass approaches are clearly permitted in some situations, I don't see how one can read the minimum altitude regulations in a way that prohibits what this guy was doing. It's pretty clear from the FAA's handling of operations that low-altitude flight in the vicinity of a runway is allowed, even when the pilot never intended to land. Pete |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Despite the two rulings, pilots should realize that currently there is
nothing in the FARs to warn you that conducting a "low approach" will only be deemed appropriate if the airport or runway is one upon which your aircraft can land. I wonder how one can legally practice engine-out procedures (trim for best glide, find a suitable field...) since part of the practice is to see if one can actually =make= the field one has picked out by using the procedures one is practicing. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jose" wrote in message
. com... I wonder how one can legally practice engine-out procedures (trim for best glide, find a suitable field...) since part of the practice is to see if one can actually =make= the field one has picked out by using the procedures one is practicing. FYI... As it happens, I just flew with an instructor yesterday, doing my BFR. During our ground discussion, he told me that he was involved in an incident in which the FAA cited him for violating the minimum safe altitude regulations. In his case, he was not doing engine-out practicing, but that did come up, and here's what the local FAA inspector said... * There is no "sparsely settled" area anywhere within the Puget Sound region, even in locations where it is miles to the nearest structure. The FAA does not provide any guidance as to what *is* a sparsely settled area, but apparently if there's any settlement anywhere within some apparently long distance, that's not "sparse". * There is no exception to the minimum safe altitude rules for the purpose of practicing engine-out procedures. If you are not over a sparsely settled area (of which there are none around here, and by this interpretation there would be none around ANY significantly populated region), then you may not descend below 500', and that goes up to 1000' above the highest obstacle within 2000' of the aircraft if the area is considered "congested" (note that they don't restrict that to man-made obstacles...if there's a 100' tree around, quite common here in the Northwest and elsewhere, your minimum altitude is actually 1100' AGL, for example). * The inspector readily admitted that there is no formal definition of the terms, and declined to offer any formal definition of the terms. They are playing by the rules set forth by the NTSB in past judgments, in that the FAA is permitted to interpret their rules as they see fit, and are not required to make any explicit statements about the specifics of the rules. So, if they see a pilot flying lower than the FAA inspector thinks he should be, and the altitude is below *some* minimum safe altitude specified, the inspector need only describe the area as an area where a higher altitude is required, and there's no defense that the pilot can mount against that. So, as far your actual question goes...it depends on what you mean by "see if one can actually make the field", but if that would require flight below 500' and you're not at an airport, then no, you can't do that practically anywhere that people live. If you're flying in a congested area (and remember, there's no formal definition of "congested area"), that minimum is the 1000' given. With a minimum altitude of 1000' above the highest obstacle within 2000', I'd say it'd be pretty hard to know for sure that you've got the field made. An experienced instructor could make a reasonably accurate judgment call, but from that altitude, all sorts of things could screw up the glide. Frankly, I think it's pretty lame for the FAA to have rules for which they don't include definitions of the terms used. I'm not one to just broadly paint the FAA as being bad, but this is certainly one area in which they need some serious improvement. Pete |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Our runway is being bulldozed! | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 28 | July 23rd 06 03:02 AM |
"Cleared Straight-In Runway X; Report Y Miles Final" | Jim Cummiskey | Piloting | 86 | August 16th 04 06:23 PM |
Diamond DA-40 with G-1000 pirep | C J Campbell | Owning | 114 | July 22nd 04 05:40 PM |
Diamond DA-40 with G-1000 pirep | C J Campbell | Piloting | 114 | July 22nd 04 05:40 PM |
FA: WEATHER FLYING: A PRACTICAL BOOK ON FLYING | The Ink Company | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | November 5th 03 12:07 AM |