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Peter wrote
There are various documents such as the cert of airworthiness, and (for an N-reg in Europe) the FAA radio license, which some say need to be carried in original. The Radio License doesn't come from the FAA, it is isued by the FCC. Bob Moore |
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You must have the original documents, as issued by the
proper government agency. The FAA may send you a fax copy which can be used within the USA, but if outside the USA you must have originals (they can be government issued duplicates.) -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Peter" wrote in message ... | | Bob Moore wrote | | There are various documents such as the cert of airworthiness, and | (for an N-reg in Europe) the FAA radio license, which some say need to | be carried in original. | | The Radio License doesn't come from the FAA, it is isued by the FCC. | | That's right. One has to pay for it, too. | | It was the *original* docs requirement that concerns me. I was pretty | sure it is false. |
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Yes, but on the holiday I'm busy and don't have all the time
to look up the ref. for you. But it is in the FAR and the "orders" the FAA issues. here is start... Title 14: Aeronautics and Space PART 91-GENERAL OPERATING AND FLIGHT RULES Subpart C-Equipment, Instrument, and Certificate Requirements Browse Previous | Browse Next § 91.203 Civil aircraft: Certifications required. (a) Except as provided in §91.715, no person may operate a civil aircraft unless it has within it the following: (1) An appropriate and current airworthiness certificate. Each U.S. airworthiness certificate used to comply with this subparagraph (except a special flight permit, a copy of the applicable operations specifications issued under §21.197(c) of this chapter, appropriate sections of the air carrier manual required by parts 121 and 135 of this chapter containing that portion of the operations specifications issued under §21.197(c), or an authorization under §91.611) must have on it the registration number assigned to the aircraft under part 47 of this chapter. However, the airworthiness certificate need not have on it an assigned special identification number before 10 days after that number is first affixed to the aircraft. A revised airworthiness certificate having on it an assigned special identification number, that has been affixed to an aircraft, may only be obtained upon application to an FAA Flight Standards district office. (2) An effective U.S. registration certificate issued to its owner or, for operation within the United States, the second duplicate copy (pink) of the Aircraft Registration Application as provided for in §47.31(b), or a registration certificate issued under the laws of a foreign country. (b) No person may operate a civil aircraft unless the airworthiness certificate required by paragraph (a) of this section or a special flight authorization issued under §91.715 is displayed at the cabin or cockpit entrance so that it is legible to passengers or crew. (c) No person may operate an aircraft with a fuel tank installed within the passenger compartment or a baggage compartment unless the installation was accomplished pursuant to part 43 of this chapter, and a copy of FAA Form 337 authorizing that installation is on board the aircraft. (d) No person may operate a civil airplane (domestic or foreign) into or out of an airport in the United States unless it complies with the fuel venting and exhaust emissions requirements of part 34 of this chapter. [Doc. No. 18334, 54 FR 34292, Aug. 18, 1989, as amended by Amdt. 91-218, 55 FR 32861, Aug. 10, 1990] Title 14: Aeronautics and Space PART 47-AIRCRAFT REGISTRATION Subpart B-Certificates of Aircraft Registration Browse Previous | Browse Next § 47.49 Replacement of Certificate. (a) If a Certificate of Aircraft Registration is lost, stolen, or mutilated, the holder of the Certificate of Aircraft Registration may apply to the FAA Aircraft Registry for a duplicate certificate, accompanying his application with the fee required by §47.17. (b) If the holder has applied and has paid the fee for a duplicate Certificate of Aircraft Registration and needs to operate his aircraft before receiving it, he may request a temporary certificate. The FAA Aircraft Registry issues a temporary certificate, by a collect telegram, to be carried in the aircraft. This temporary certificate is valid until he receives the duplicate Certicate of Aircraft Registration. Browse Previous | Browse Next "Peter" wrote in message ... | | "Jim Macklin" wrote | | You must have the original documents, as issued by the | proper government agency. The FAA may send you a fax copy | which can be used within the USA, but if outside the USA you | must have originals (they can be government issued | duplicates.) | | Do you have a reference for the above? |
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![]() "Peter" wrote in message ... "Jim Macklin" wrote: Yes, but on the holiday I'm busy and don't have all the time to look up the ref. for you. But it is in the FAR and the "orders" the FAA issues. here is start... Title 14: Aeronautics and Space PART 91-GENERAL OPERATING AND FLIGHT RULES Subpart C-Equipment, Instrument, and Certificate Requirements [snip] It doesn't actually state that the *original* must be carried. It does imply in The FAA Aircraft Registry issues a temporary certificate, by a collect telegram, to be carried in the aircraft. This temporary certificate is valid until he receives the duplicate Certicate of Aircraft Registration. that if a temporary certificate is the only one about, then it needs to be carried, but again it doesn't say that the actual piece of paper received from the FAA has to be inside the aircraft. Obviously, the reason I ask this is because carrying original documents is not safe; if they get lost it is a major hassle, here in Europe where e.g. the French are occassionally hostile to U.S. registered aircraft. More like persistently hostile. even more hostile when the certificates are not government issued. If you carry around the real free circulation certificate it makes no sense not to have the other originals in the plane. |
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On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 23:20:45 +0000, Peter
wrote: I disagree, but anyway that is not the question I was asking. I was looking for a reference for a requirement to carry *originals* in an N-reg. I don't believe there is such a requirement, despite frequent "information" posted in the usual places. But there is no harm in asking. I'd posit that there's reasonable evidence to infer the original must be carried, absent the specific wording you are looking for saying that you have to use the original. The certificate itself has "This certificate must be carried when the aircraft is operated" (or something very close, I don't have mine in front of me right now) printed on it in the upper-right hand corner. The FAA makes a large deal about the application for registration having to be done in original and signed in ink, no copies or electronic versions allowed. They also state that the pink copy of the application must be carried in the aircraft until the permanent certificate is received. In the documentation for 8050-1 they don't indicate that a photocopy of the pink temporary slip would be acceptable, but specifically enumerating that the *pink* copy must be carried (and reinforcing it in 47.31(b)) indicates that they intend on the original pink copy being used, not a photocopy. It would be reasonable to ask why would that requirement change once you get the real card? 91.203(a)(2) also states specifically the pink copy, implying that an original of the other two acceptable forms (effective U.S. registration certificate, or a registration certificate issued under the laws of a foreign country) would need to be an original as well. 47.49 deals with replacing a lost, stolen, or mutilated registration. Paragraph B states that if you need to operate your aircraft before a duplicate is received, you can get a collect telegram which must be carried in the aircraft. Why would they require an original of the collect telegraph, or an official FAA fax, if you could just photocopy the original certificate for the aircraft, then lock it away, and subsequently make additional copies to carry any time the photocopy carried in the aircraft is misplaced, lost, whatever? Although appearing to address operations outside the US, http://www.faa.gov/library/manuals/e...a/2_044_01.pdf para 2(a)(2)(b) states "The regulations do not authorize operation outside the United States unless an actual registration certificate is in the aircraft. However, the Aircraft Registration Branch, AFS-750, will, upon request from the owner, fax a copy of the registration to the individual whose name appears on the application as the registered owner. The faxed copy may be used as a temporary registration until the owner receives original registration. As with the original registration certificate, the copy must be carried in the aircraft." I would postulate that if they really wanted to violate someone under 91.203 for carrying a photocopy, they'd pull that last sentence out as additional evidence of their intent that an original be carried. I believe they'd also go as far as to point out that there are other certificates (a-la pilots, medical) which must also be carried per 61.3. 61.3(a)(1) deals with the pilot certificate, and nowhere there does it say it must be original, but it is implied by coupling it in paragraph (2) with a Government-issued photo ID. A photocopy of your drivers license isn't Government issued. 61.3(c)(1) deals with the medical, and a case can be made that a photocopy of your medical isn't issued under part 67, so it has to be original too. Why would the registration be special if all the other documents have to be original? Just my 0x02c. P |
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Peter Clark wrote:
I believe they'd also go as far as to point out that there are other certificates (a-la pilots, medical) which must also be carried per 61.3. 61.3(a)(1) deals with the pilot certificate, and nowhere there does it say it must be original, but it is implied by coupling it in paragraph (2) with a Government-issued photo ID. This matter came under discussion at a Wings meeting. The inspector giving the lecture said that the FARs require that "this certificate" be carried, and that means what it says. Only the original is legal. The topic under discussion was pilots' certificates, not airworthiness certificates, but if the wording is the same in the FARs, then I'd bet the FAA has the same interpretation. George Patterson We don't stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing. |
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On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 16:10:24 +0000, Peter
wrote: In which case, what could be the sanction if an original was not on board? (Forget the case of the French Customs for the moment; they are a law unto themselves). In the US they would notify you of the alleged violation, give you a chance to respond, and assuming you were found responsible they would then impose whatever legal sanction is available to them for violations 61.3 or 91.203(2). If an original is required (and it appears to me that it is), carrying around a copy is the same as not having it "in that person's physical possession or readily accessible in the aircraft when exercising the privileges of that pilot certificate or authorization", or WRT the registration/airworthiness certificates, "displayed at the cabin or cockpit entrance so that it is legible to passengers or crew." They would end up either suspending for some length of time, or revoking your certificate(s) depending on whatever other factors surround the incident and your enforcement record. |
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Peter wrote:
What would happen if the original was not on board, and there was an incident? As far as a pilot's certificate is concerned, if you don't have that handy and get caught flying an aircraft, the FAA would issue a violation. IME the first thing the insurance company checks is that all paperwork is in order. So, if e.g. the pilot was not licensed to do the flight, the insurer will walk away from it right away. This is not true. If the aircraft was actually unairworthy (eg. expired annual), then the insurer would walk away. If the pilot did not have a pilot's certificate at all, or was not rated for that category and class of aircraft, then the insurer would walk away. If you have all the paperwork but don't happen to have it in the plane, you're still insured. Read your policy. It will tell you what they cover and what they don't. George Patterson We don't stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing. |
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Peter wrote:
In the totalitarian communist countries an adult had to carry an internal passport / ID document, and if this was not carried, and he got stopped and checked, he'd be locked up until somebody produced the documents. I don't think the USA, or any other western country would do this. you seem to be wrong http://www.papersplease.org/ --Sylvain |
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Peter wrote:
In the totalitarian communist countries an adult had to carry an internal passport / ID document, and if this was not carried, and he got stopped and checked, he'd be locked up until somebody produced the documents. I don't think the USA, or any other western country would do this. In Atlanta in 1973, failure to produce identification on the request of a police officer would get you jailed. You did get to explain the situation to a judge within a couple days. I think the Federal courts eventually forbad that practice, but I'm not sure when. George Patterson We don't stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing. |
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