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#1
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I am buying a DG505 Orion from South Africa - I need to figure out the best way to get the paperwork in order. It will ship in the next month, but right now I have options of getting it here and doing things to make the registration go better - ANY IDEAS, or Thoughts are appreciated.
WH Bill Hanson |
#2
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I can't speak to this page still being 100% accurate, but it's probably a good start.
http://mitsa.aerobaticsweb.org/glider_import.html |
#3
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Here's another for you: http://www.insuredaircraft.com/
I used them to get all of my paperwork through the FAA very quickly and at a very reasonable cost. On 2/16/2017 8:54 AM, wrote: I can't speak to this page still being 100% accurate, but it's probably a good start. http://mitsa.aerobaticsweb.org/glider_import.html -- Dan, 5J |
#4
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#5
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I was looking at a glider that had been imported from South Africa. There's
a fee for deregistration, as well as significant time for paper shuffling. |
#6
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Bill,
Mssrs Optiz and Marotta's experience will guide you well. Don't underestimate the guidance the local FSDO might provide to you if you contact the FAA first, instead of using them only to troubleshoot. They're not supposed to be obstructionists. That 505 looks like a great ship; good luck with it. https://www.faa.gov/licenses_certifi...port_aircraft/ https://www.aopa.org/training-and-sa...raft#importing |
#7
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At 01:39 17 February 2017, Duster wrote:
Bill, Mssrs Optiz and Marotta's experience will guide you well. Don't underestim= ate the guidance the local FSDO might provide to you if you contact the FAA= first, instead of using them only to troubleshoot. They're not supposed to= be obstructionists. That 505 looks like a great ship; good luck with it. https://www.faa.gov/licenses_certifi...tification/air craft_r= egistry/import_aircraft/ https://www.aopa.org/training-and-sa...hive/aircraft- ownership/bus= iness-justification/importing-and-exporting-aircraft#importing There is a critical item missing from the AOPA web site. They refer to a bi-lateral airworthiness agreement between the USA and the other country, and list a bunch of countries, where South Africa is included. The problem is that those agreements are only for aircraft manufactured in either of the two signing countries. (USA and S.A. in this case) In the DG-505 case, the glider was not manufactured in S.A., so what you are really looking for is a 3rd country manufacture bi-lateral agreement which does NOT exist between the USA and S.A. That means that the USA FAA will NOT recognize an Export C of A for a glider imported from S.A. but manufactured somewhere else. Also, if you search the FAA TCDS listings, there is no TCDS for the DG 505 Orion ELAN (only for the DG-500). So, without a 3rd country bi-lateral agreement and a USA TCDS, the glider will have to be registered in the Experimental category once you get it here. If there were a valid TCDS (which I somehow missed), and lacking a 3rd country import bi-lateral agreement, you could then still get a USA Standard airworthiness by going Dan's route in hiring a DAR and going through a very expensive conformity inspection. See the table in appendix 4 on page 63 of the pdf file. Look at the fourth column from the right for 3rd country manufacture bi-lateral agreements with the USA FAA: https://www.faa.gov/documentlibrary/..._circular/ac21 -23b.pdf Here is a note which I found in the Import Requirements section of the FAA DG-500 TCDS: "Gliders manufactured in Slovenia under jurisdiction of the Slovenian Directorate of Civil Aviation are not within the scope of the current agreement or past agreements and therefore are not eligible for a U.S. standard airworthiness certificate." RO |
#8
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Just a comment on Mike O.'s information: Though the Mexican Export C of
A for my Stemme was not acceptable for a US Standard Airworthiness Certificate, there does exist a German Export C of A for that ship and I made that available to the DAR. I believe that was the basis for my US Standard Certification and the DAR's inspection was to verify that the ship conformed to /_that_/ C of A. Of course, I've misunderstood things before... On 2/16/2017 8:25 PM, Michael Opitz wrote: At 01:39 17 February 2017, Duster wrote: Bill, Mssrs Optiz and Marotta's experience will guide you well. Don't underestim= ate the guidance the local FSDO might provide to you if you contact the FAA= first, instead of using them only to troubleshoot. They're not supposed to= be obstructionists. That 505 looks like a great ship; good luck with it. https://www.faa.gov/licenses_certifi...tification/air craft_r= egistry/import_aircraft/ https://www.aopa.org/training-and-sa...hive/aircraft- ownership/bus= iness-justification/importing-and-exporting-aircraft#importing There is a critical item missing from the AOPA web site. They refer to a bi-lateral airworthiness agreement between the USA and the other country, and list a bunch of countries, where South Africa is included. The problem is that those agreements are only for aircraft manufactured in either of the two signing countries. (USA and S.A. in this case) In the DG-505 case, the glider was not manufactured in S.A., so what you are really looking for is a 3rd country manufacture bi-lateral agreement which does NOT exist between the USA and S.A. That means that the USA FAA will NOT recognize an Export C of A for a glider imported from S.A. but manufactured somewhere else. Also, if you search the FAA TCDS listings, there is no TCDS for the DG 505 Orion ELAN (only for the DG-500). So, without a 3rd country bi-lateral agreement and a USA TCDS, the glider will have to be registered in the Experimental category once you get it here. If there were a valid TCDS (which I somehow missed), and lacking a 3rd country import bi-lateral agreement, you could then still get a USA Standard airworthiness by going Dan's route in hiring a DAR and going through a very expensive conformity inspection. See the table in appendix 4 on page 63 of the pdf file. Look at the fourth column from the right for 3rd country manufacture bi-lateral agreements with the USA FAA: https://www.faa.gov/documentlibrary/..._circular/ac21 -23b.pdf Here is a note which I found in the Import Requirements section of the FAA DG-500 TCDS: "Gliders manufactured in Slovenia under jurisdiction of the Slovenian Directorate of Civil Aviation are not within the scope of the current agreement or past agreements and therefore are not eligible for a U.S. standard airworthiness certificate." RO -- Dan, 5J |
#9
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Thank you for all the extremely useful info! and guidance.
the effort is very much appreciated! Bill, WH |
#10
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At 15:25 17 February 2017, Dan Marotta wrote:
Just a comment on Mike O.'s information: Though the Mexican Export C of A for my Stemme was not acceptable for a US Standard Airworthiness Certificate, there does exist a German Export C of A for that ship and I made that available to the DAR. I believe that was the basis for my US Standard Certification and the DAR's inspection was to verify that the ship conformed to /_that_/ C of A. Of course, I've misunderstood things before... On 2/16/2017 8:25 PM, Michael Opitz wrote: At 01:39 17 February 2017, Duster wrote: Bill, Mssrs Optiz and Marotta's experience will guide you well. Don't underestim= ate the guidance the local FSDO might provide to you if you contact the FAA= first, instead of using them only to troubleshoot. They're not supposed to= be obstructionists. That 505 looks like a great ship; good luck with it. https://www.faa.gov/licenses_certifi...ertification/a ir craft_r= egistry/import_aircraft/ https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/pic- archive/aircraft- ownership/bus= iness-justification/importing-and-exporting- aircraft#importing There is a critical item missing from the AOPA web site. They refer to a bi-lateral airworthiness agreement between the USA and the other country, and list a bunch of countries, where South Africa is included. The problem is that those agreements are only for aircraft manufactured in either of the two signing countries. (USA and S.A. in this case) In the DG-505 case, the glider was not manufactured in S.A., so what you are really looking for is a 3rd country manufacture bi-lateral agreement which does NOT exist between the USA and S.A. That means that the USA FAA will NOT recognize an Export C of A for a glider imported from S.A. but manufactured somewhere else. Also, if you search the FAA TCDS listings, there is no TCDS for the DG 505 Orion ELAN (only for the DG-500). So, without a 3rd country bi-lateral agreement and a USA TCDS, the glider will have to be registered in the Experimental category once you get it here. If there were a valid TCDS (which I somehow missed), and lacking a 3rd country import bi-lateral agreement, you could then still get a USA Standard airworthiness by going Dan's route in hiring a DAR and going through a very expensive conformity inspection. See the table in appendix 4 on page 63 of the pdf file. Look at the fourth column from the right for 3rd country manufacture bi- lateral agreements with the USA FAA: https://www.faa.gov/documentlibrary/...ory_circular/a c21 -23b.pdf Here is a note which I found in the Import Requirements section of the FAA DG-500 TCDS: "Gliders manufactured in Slovenia under jurisdiction of the Slovenian Directorate of Civil Aviation are not within the scope of the current agreement or past agreements and therefore are not eligible for a U.S. standard airworthiness certificate." RO -- Dan, 5J The FAA and thus the DAR are only concerned with the existence of a TCDS, and should one exist, confirming that the aircraft conforms with the specifications stipulated by it. A foreign Export C of A is useless unless there is a bilateral TCDS to go by. RO |
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