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FAA gets it right! (Read 290 times)
Jul 20th, 2004 at 2:23pm

ozzy72   Offline
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WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Aviation Administration announced new safety rules Tuesday for light recreational aircraft like balloons, powered parachutes and gliders - a victory for private aviation groups that have long sought to lower the hurdles to flying entry-level aircraft.
Under the rules, an aviation enthusiast will be able to obtain a sport pilot license with lower training requirements than for a private pilot's license. The FAA said generally light sport aircraft are safer than private aircraft because they fly so low and so slow.
``We want to make aviation safe and affordable for recreational pilots,'' said Marion Blakey, FAA administrator. She said the rule ``reduces the barriers to becoming a pilot and an aircraft owner while assuring that safety will always be the priority.''
Experimental Aircraft Association spokesman David Berkley said the new rules will make it cheaper and faster to get a license to fly.
``It really does promote access to the dream of flight,'' Berkley said.
Private pilots are required to have 40 hours of training and a medical certificate from the government. To qualify for a sport pilot's license, a candidate will need 20 hours of training and a valid driver's license.
The new rules cover aircraft that weigh no more than 1,320 lbs. and have a level-flight speed of no more than 120 knots. Included are gyroplanes, powered parachutes, balloons, certain gliders and some two-seater planes, depending on the number of occupants, weight and airspeed.
Earl Lawrence, the EAA's vice president of regulatory affairs, said the rules also ease the regulatory requirements for manufacturers, opening a mass market for ``low and slow'' planes.
``It allows them to produce and bring into the marketplace less expensive airplanes that meet the weight limitations of sport aircraft,'' Lawrence said.
Most ``low and slow'' recreational aircraft are now built by individuals from kits, Lawrence said.
Currently, he said, certification accounts for about half the cost of bringing an airplane to market. It can take years for aircraft makers to prove to the inspectors that every part on the plane works, Lawrence said. FAA inspectors must certify the manufacturing plant and each component as it's being built.
The new rules will require manufacturers to build the plane to a standard, develop quality control standards and establish ways to recall the planes. The rules will require an FAA inspector or designee to inspect the plane at point of sale to make sure it will fly, he said.
The new regulations will also allow people to buy insurance and register light aircraft, which in turn will enable them to finance purchases of the planes, Lawrence said.
The Piper Cub - a small two-seater introduced in 1936 - would qualify as a sport plane. A Piper Cub hangs in the FAA lobby in Washington.
The new rule also creates a pilot's license for another kind of aircraft, the experimental light sport aircraft. Those include certain kinds of ultralights, which are defined as single-seat flying machines that weigh less than 254 pounds, carry no more than 5 gallons of fuel and have a top speed of 63 miles per hour.
 

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There are two types of aeroplane, Spitfires and everything else that wishes it was a Spitfire!
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Reply #1 - Jul 20th, 2004 at 2:40pm

Hagar   Offline
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I'm not quite so sure about this. We will have to see how it works out. I wonder if the JAA/CAA will follow their example. They never saw eye-to-eye with the FAA on some issues in all the time I was involved in the business. I don't foresee that changing any time soon.

Flying on a drivers licence. Hmmm.  Roll Eyes From what I've seen, some of these guys are already a darned nuisance over here & they're not too popular with pilots of conventional aircraft. This can only make things worse in our already overcrowded skies. IMHO

I'm surprised the Piper Cub qualifies for this new category.

If you want an example of how some of these people carry on in the UK read "Propellerhead" by Antony Woodward. It certainly opened my eyes. Scary. Shocked
 

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Reply #2 - Jul 20th, 2004 at 3:19pm

Felix/FFDS   Offline
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I'm surprised Ozzy's happy at the news - the regulations still don't allow rampant production of Spitfires!
 

Felix/FFDS...
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Reply #3 - Jul 20th, 2004 at 3:28pm

ozzy72   Offline
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Pretty scary huh?
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Actually I was thinking of my good buddy Dave (Fly2e) as he was talking about getting flying shortly....
As for Spitfires, watch yourself chaps, the evil one is at work Grin
 

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There are two types of aeroplane, Spitfires and everything else that wishes it was a Spitfire!
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