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#23
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On Thu, 25 Aug 2005 15:07:07 +0100, Peter wrote:
Ron Rosenfeld wrote: Thank you for that information. And I'll guess that the ferry pilot was probably flying an N-registered a/c, so I'm guessing the regulation applies to all. Yes, the SR20 is EASA certified but the SR22 isn't (yet). The SR20 got certified only over the dead body of some of the European CAAs, whose view is that a parachute isn't something a proper pilot should be provided with ![]() My wife is from the Azores, and it is possible we may go there for extended periods (e.g. several months). If we do, from what I have read, I would be able to fly IFR (and night) in my N-registered a/c with my FAA license; where I would not have those privileges in a Portugese registered a/c unless I took some onerous tests. To fly IFR in a Portugese reg aircraft you will need the JAA IR. You can get that from the FAA IR with a (minimum) of 15hrs additional flight training, plus the entire JAA PPL/IR ground school; approx 10 of the 14 ATPL ground exams. You will also need a JAA PPL to attach it to; a few hours' flying and a checkride, plus probably all the 6 (7?) PPL ground exams. You could file an IFR-VFR flight plan; so long as you are VFR at the European FIR boundary and thereafter, you are legal. In practice, as any European "VFR" pilot with actual instrument skills and a suitable aircraft knows, you've got to be VFR where you might get caught, so an IFR approach (ILS etc) is out of the question given you aren't on an IFR FP by then. So you have to make sure you are VFR say 10-20 miles out, and preferably out of CAS, and definitely below Class A ![]() I've done this sort of thing 100% legally off Italy, flying some 100 miles at 1000ft above the sea, 30 miles offshore so out of VHF radio contact. Americans have it pretty good! The new Mooney Ovation2GX, with long-range tanks, has more than enough range to make that flight. Now I just have to figure out how to pay for it :-). Marry a richer woman ![]() It will go across the Atlantic?? What about the winds when going East? I don't believe folk fly in the winter, when the winds are strongest. But there are no legs to Europe longer than CYYT-LPL (St. John's, NF -- Lajes Field, Azores) and that's only 1/2 the maximum range of the a/c. I may have missed this bit, so let me ask again: Is it a true statement that, so long as I have the required equipment, I can exercise my FAA IFR privileges in Europe so long as I am flying an N-registered a/c? Thanks. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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