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I just took my commercial checkride a few feeks ago. I was taught by my
instructor to overly a non-towered airport by tpa+500ft (or more), proceed away from the airport WITHOUT descending and then enter the pattern( i.e. enter 45 and descent to TPA). On my checkride the Examiner also expected this. I was taught that the key is to not descent to or below TPA unless you are commiting to landing, which means adhering to FARS and AIM procedures. Flying over the Field at or below TPA just to take a look may be considered famously "careless and reckless". I can't find it at the moment, but my instructor showed me the TPA+500 rule in the AIM or FARs. In all of my instrument and private training somehow the overly the airport rule was missed. The Examiner explained that just because YOU might know what you are doing, every other pilot will be expecting everone to be following standard procedures. When pilots deviate, not matter how well they think they are communicating their intentions, accidents frequently happen. Who expects someone to be cutting across the field a few hundred feet below them while on downwind? Above all it's probably best ot use common sense. At Bremerton Airport near me, there are so many training aircraft and pilots who forget to announce position, chaos, etc, I am hesitant to overfly the field at all. Since I know the area well, I feel it's safer to not overfly. At a new airport or one that has wildlife that frequents the field makes more sense. Just my two cents. Good post! 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 |
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