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#31
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The FAA usually feels that they don't have to define commonly used English
words. Webster's or Oxford already does that job nicely. Like trying to find their definitions for words like "densely populated" and "sparsely populated" in the FAA's dictionary. |
#32
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![]() If you had fewer clouds than the standard definition of "scattered" (which isn't the FAA's definition), then perhaps you should have described them as "few". As I've stated, it was even fewer than "few"... But in any case, I'd say what we're "getting hung up on" is your use of the word "cloud". The number of clouds is irrelevant. If there's just one, it's still illegal to touch that one cloud while operating VFR (the exact distance depends on the particular airspace, but there's no allowance for actually touching a cloud while VFR). IMHO we need a better working definition of "cloud". Remaining "clear of clouds" or "x distance from clouds" is all fine and dandy when they're big, massive CBs -- anyone can figure that one out. But what of these little puffies? Somehow treating a Toyota-sized puff with the same deference as a 50-story cumulo-nimbus cloud seems absurd. IMHO, if you cannot see through the condensed moisture suspended in the air, it's a cloud. You may argue that it's so small as to not present a safety issue, but the legal requirement does not provide exceptions for clouds that are small enough to see around. What is the source of that tid-bit, if you don't mind sharing? Or are you just restating the "clear of clouds" line from the FAR-AIM? (As a reminder: "legal" is not the same as "safe", just as "illegal is not the same as "unsafe"...the two terms often coincide, but you need to meet both "legal" AND "safe" as a pilot). Right. I believe I was both, but it's all going to come down to the FAA's definition of "cloud". If you can see THROUGH, then you're just fine, IMHO. That's not a cloud, it's a visibility reduction. If you cannot see through the cloud, you have no business touching it, no matter how small. If that's the FAA's definition of "cloud" I was clearly in violation of the FARs. I personally don't think that's what is meant by "clear of clouds" (or even "cloud", for that matter) -- but I can't find any hard and fast definition of "cloud" in the FARs... Crap. We could go down this road with other FAA weather descriptions, too. What's "fog"? I've flown in haze that was pretty close to fog, and I've seen fog that wasn't as thick as the haze we routinely fly in around here in August. Most people would say it's illegal to fly VFR in fog, no? What are "known icing conditions"? By some people's definition of the FARs I fly in them all the time, VFR. Of course, I'm thousands of feet below the freezing level, in light rain -- but technically I'm in "known icing conditions" by some definitions... Mary and I have pretty stringent minimums that we won't violate when flying. At no time do we ever fly in any manner that we don't *both* agree is "safe." We also both have a solid working knowledge of the FARs, and we do not consider cloud, er, "Puffie Dancing" (that just doesn't have the same 'ring' to it) to be in violation of the FARs. Dipping a wing in a puffie on a clear VFR day, far from any airport, hundreds of miles from the nearest busy airspace, is one of the true joys of flying, and it would strike me as sad to think that someone would view it as "illegal" or "unsafe"... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#33
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-- and they don't critique my landings!
...sorry about that. :-) Montblack Did you critique my landings? Can you say "forward CG"??? ducking! :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#34
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ROFL! Run Jay, he can't catch ya! or just stop and tell him a joke,
laughing will kill him! ![]() Jim "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... -- and they don't critique my landings! ...sorry about that. :-) Montblack Did you critique my landings? Can you say "forward CG"??? ducking! :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#35
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Secondly, you certainly have not made clear that you have been
obeying the spirit of the FARs. I know I shouldn't even bother to respond (Feel...myself...being...paralyzed...by...the...co bra's...stare...), but how so? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#36
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Jay Honeck wrote:
SomehowÂ*treatingÂ*aÂ*Toyota-sizedÂ*puff with the same deference as a 50-story cumulo-nimbus cloud seems absurd. Sure, but I'm not getting w/in 500' of a "50-story cumulo-nimbus cloud". The legal clearances are a minimum; sanity sometimes dictates additional spacing. BTW, I've never seen a definition of "cloud" either. I'm not sure I'd use the "see through" description. Although that does make sense, I think I'd use a stricter definition: a region with less than VFR visibility. That is, if there's a chunk of sky with visibility below 3 miles, I'd call that a cloud. I'm not sure exactly why that definition appeals to me, but it does. Perhaps because it fits with other limitations on VFR flight. - Andrew |
#37
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
oups.com... As I've stated, it was even fewer than "few"... And as I've stated, it really doesn't matter what the number of clouds was. But since you brought it up: "few" is any number of clouds from 0 (non-inclusive) to fewer than 1/8 sky coverage. The only "fewer than 'few'" is no clouds at all. IMHO we need a better working definition of "cloud". Something wrong with your dictionary? Remaining "clear of clouds" or "x distance from clouds" is all fine and dandy when they're big, massive CBs -- anyone can figure that one out. But what of these little puffies? Somehow treating a Toyota-sized puff with the same deference as a 50-story cumulo-nimbus cloud seems absurd. Why? The bottom line is this: if an airplane could fly through the cloud without you seeing it until it has emerged, it's a safety hazard. Even the "semi-truck" sized clouds you described are capable of creating that situation. IMHO, if you cannot see through the condensed moisture suspended in the air, it's a cloud. You may argue that it's so small as to not present a safety issue, but the legal requirement does not provide exceptions for clouds that are small enough to see around. What is the source of that tid-bit, if you don't mind sharing? Or are you just restating the "clear of clouds" line from the FAR-AIM? My "source" is the dictionary, along with my opinion. I did write that it was my opinion. However, it is based on sound, logical reasoning: "if you cannot see through..." The point of the cloud clearance requirements is to allow for "see and avoid". If you cannot see through the condensed moisture, then it is preventing "see and avoid", and the requirements intended to allow "see and avoid" should prevail. What is YOUR justification for not counting as a cloud an area of condensed moisture that blocks your view of possible air traffic? Right. I believe I was both, but it's all going to come down to the FAA's definition of "cloud". As has been pointed out to you: if the FAA does not provide a definition, you look to your dictionary. If you can see THROUGH, then you're just fine, IMHO. That's not a cloud, it's a visibility reduction. If you cannot see through the cloud, you have no business touching it, no matter how small. If that's the FAA's definition of "cloud" I was clearly in violation of the FARs. I personally don't think that's what is meant by "clear of clouds" (or even "cloud", for that matter) -- but I can't find any hard and fast definition of "cloud" in the FARs... There's a lot of things that the FARs don't define explicitly. However, that doesn't mean each of us gets to make up our own definition for those words. Crap. We could go down this road with other FAA weather descriptions, too. I doubt it. At the least, you didn't provide any examples of the above statement. What's "fog"? I've flown in haze that was pretty close to fog, and I've seen fog that wasn't as thick as the haze we routinely fly in around here in August. Most people would say it's illegal to fly VFR in fog, no? There are no aviation regulations governing flight in "fog". There ARE regulations governing flight in particular visibility conditions, but you are permitted to fly VFR in "fog" as long as your visibility is at least 1 mile (for Class G airspace and certain other situations...higher for other kinds of airspace, of course). You can define "fog" however you like. Since the word isn't used to describe the rules pertaining to VFR flight, it doesn't matter what the definition you use is. What are "known icing conditions"? By some people's definition of the FARs I fly in them all the time, VFR. Of course, I'm thousands of feet below the freezing level, in light rain -- but technically I'm in "known icing conditions" by some definitions... By which definitions? The FAA says "known icing conditions" are visible moisture with the outside air temperature at or below freezing. By whose definition would you be in "known icing conditions" when flying "thousands of feet below the freezing level"? The FAA's definition is pretty clear. People can and do violate it. But that doesn't change the specificity of the FAA's definition. Mary and I have pretty stringent minimums that we won't violate when flying. Apparently they are your own, however. The FAA uses different minimums. At no time do we ever fly in any manner that we don't *both* agree is "safe." As stated befo "legal" and "safe" are not necessarily the same thing. You can be "safe", and yet still "not legal". We also both have a solid working knowledge of the FARs, So you say. and we do not consider cloud, er, "Puffie Dancing" (that just doesn't have the same 'ring' to it) to be in violation of the FARs. However, it is. Dipping a wing in a puffie on a clear VFR day, far from any airport, hundreds of miles from the nearest busy airspace, is one of the true joys of flying, and it would strike me as sad to think that someone would view it as "illegal" or "unsafe"... Replace the activity with any number of other statements: "touching a float down, on a smooth glassy lake"; "rolling inverted, below a pure blue sky and above rolling green hills"; "soaring with the condors over the vast desert in an unpowered glider". They all could be called "one of the true joys of flying". Yet, they are not legal for all pilots at all times. Just because something is enjoyable, or even may be "one of the true joys of flying", does not mean that everyone has the unrestrained privilege to engage in that activity whenever they like. Your activity is, at a minimum, illegal. It may well be unsafe as well, at least in the sense that you have abandoned the cloud clearance requirements of the FARs, allowing for the potential of other air traffic emerging from a cloud right where you are. I will certainly grant that, for small enough clouds, spaced far enough apart, making some basic assumptions about the slowest air traffic likely to be flying in your area, you can make an assertion that because you have been monitoring the airspace prior to your approach to the cloud, and because that airspace has been clear of traffic, you know no air traffic could have entered the cloud at a time that would result it leaving the cloud just as you were adjacent to the cloud. But none of that makes it legal, and in fact it assumes you have perfect knowledge of the air traffic in the area, and have not overlooked someone flying through the area. As I like to point out to people who roll through stop signs, park on the wrong side of the street, etc.: practically no one drives their vehicle into an obstacle that they saw, and yet lots of collisions still occur. The reason we follow certain rules and regulations is that we sometimes do not see the obstacle, and following those rules and regulations either keeps us safely away from the obstacle, or allows us for more room for error, to avoid the obstacle. Pete |
#38
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
ups.com... Secondly, you certainly have not made clear that you have been obeying the spirit of the FARs. but how so? What do you mean "how so?" The FARs state you must remain clear of clouds (at a minimum) while flying VFR. Nothing you've written has explained how it is you managed to put your wing in a cloud, while still remaining clear of the cloud. There's an *absence* of that information. I can't explain it other than to reiterate the absence of that information. Pete |
#39
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Jay Honeck wrote:
If you had fewer clouds than the standard definition of "scattered" (which isn't the FAA's definition), then perhaps you should have described them as "few". As I've stated, it was even fewer than "few"... But in any case, I'd say what we're "getting hung up on" is your use of the word "cloud". The number of clouds is irrelevant. If there's just one, it's still illegal to touch that one cloud while operating VFR (the exact distance depends on the particular airspace, but there's no allowance for actually touching a cloud while VFR). IMHO we need a better working definition of "cloud". Remaining "clear of clouds" or "x distance from clouds" is all fine and dandy when they're big, massive CBs -- anyone can figure that one out. But what of these little puffies? Somehow treating a Toyota-sized puff with the same deference as a 50-story cumulo-nimbus cloud seems absurd. IMHO, if you cannot see through the condensed moisture suspended in the air, it's a cloud. You may argue that it's so small as to not present a safety issue, but the legal requirement does not provide exceptions for clouds that are small enough to see around. What is the source of that tid-bit, if you don't mind sharing? Or are you just restating the "clear of clouds" line from the FAR-AIM? (As a reminder: "legal" is not the same as "safe", just as "illegal is not the same as "unsafe"...the two terms often coincide, but you need to meet both "legal" AND "safe" as a pilot). Right. I believe I was both, but it's all going to come down to the FAA's definition of "cloud". If you can see THROUGH, then you're just fine, IMHO. That's not a cloud, it's a visibility reduction. If you cannot see through the cloud, you have no business touching it, no matter how small. If that's the FAA's definition of "cloud" I was clearly in violation of the FARs. I personally don't think that's what is meant by "clear of clouds" (or even "cloud", for that matter) -- but I can't find any hard and fast definition of "cloud" in the FARs... Crap. We could go down this road with other FAA weather descriptions, too. What's "fog"? I've flown in haze that was pretty close to fog, and I've seen fog that wasn't as thick as the haze we routinely fly in around here in August. Most people would say it's illegal to fly VFR in fog, no? What are "known icing conditions"? By some people's definition of the FARs I fly in them all the time, VFR. Of course, I'm thousands of feet below the freezing level, in light rain -- but technically I'm in "known icing conditions" by some definitions... Mary and I have pretty stringent minimums that we won't violate when flying. At no time do we ever fly in any manner that we don't *both* agree is "safe." We also both have a solid working knowledge of the FARs, and we do not consider cloud, er, "Puffie Dancing" (that just doesn't have the same 'ring' to it) to be in violation of the FARs. Dipping a wing in a puffie on a clear VFR day, far from any airport, hundreds of miles from the nearest busy airspace, is one of the true joys of flying, and it would strike me as sad to think that someone would view it as "illegal" or "unsafe"... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Jay; I don't think you and Mary agreeing that something is safe gets to override the FARs. It pretty clear that the FARs say no touching the clouds when your VFR. You can do it if you choose, but don't delude yourself into thinking that it's legal. I drive over the speed limit but I know I'm breaking the rules. It does not stop me from speeding but I know that I may hve to pay the price and I accept it. John PS. I would not brag about it on the net if I were you. Speeding they have to catch me doing but the FAA operates by a differnet set of rules. |
#40
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Good job on sharing the experience with the kids. Stay safe.
Bryan "The Monk" Chaisone |
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