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US 14CFR91.119 Minimum safe altitudes
Except when necessary for takeoff and landing, no person may operate an aircraft below the following altitudes: (c) Over other than congested areas. An altitude of 500 feet above the surface, except over open water or sparsely populated areas. In those cases, the aircraft may not be operated closer than 500 feet to any person, vessel, vehicle, or structure. *********************** My take on this has always been that the avoidance of persons, vessels, vehicles and structures is specifically to avoid injuring people. The assumption is that vessels, vehicles and structures may have people in them. I don't consider a fencepost a structure. If the regulations had intended all property to be protected, they would include animals (livestock) also. The FAA has a very clear history of citing pilots who fly very low over trailers with lights on while ignoring pilots who fly low over vast tracts of greenhouses. The main difference is the human beings complaining. My take on low passes not necessary for landing? If they are 500 feet away from people (or vessels, vehicles, and structures people are inside) then pilot discretion. Some runways (McClellan former AFB, Castle, Avenal) have plenty of space and even the taxiways are far from where a low pass is done. I fly low a lot. My goal is always more common sense than pure regulation: don't ever make any person on the ground feel threatened by the aircraft. If there is a chance a vessel, vehicle, or structure is occupied, avoid pointing at it and turn away from it as I get close. Would I do a low pass over another aircraft on the runway, near aircraft on taxiways, or over a motorhome parked at the end of the runway? No way. Do I try very hard to avoid overflying people or aircraft even during landing? Yes I do. Can one do a low pass safely less than 500 feet from random kids and dogs who may enjoy runing out onto the runway to watch (as there are no airshow CAP cadets to hold them back)? Maybe. I dunno. I have landed a few times and been very, very frightened by the thought of my wing decapitating some eager spectators whose distance perception is foiled by their camera viewfinder. And this was technically leagal! Eeek! Lots of energy and speed during the pass maybe gives more control to avoid a collision than during landing, so maybe it is actually safer. But if I were a CD, I'd probably encourage pilots to do this, if at all, 500 feet laterally from any people. I think that is still close enough to look cool, right? This fencepost business and the idea that a fencepost is a 91.119 "structure" sounds like urban pilot legend to me. I'll stack my AOPA legal team against that blather any day ![]() Oh, and I'm gonna bring my silly red reflective vest to Avenal and wear it during the contest if I'm wandering around the runway near you silent supersonic white scythes of death, ok? ![]() -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
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![]() Think about the finish gate at Avenal, Mark. Where does it start? At the western edge of the ramp/runway. What else is located on the western edge of the ramp/runway? The glider tie-down used for contests. What do we find in the glider tie-down area besides gliders? Motor homes, wives and kids. 500 feet is quite a long ways, it's almost 2 football fields. The feds can't enforce everything, but have an accident and watch the tape measures come out. See you there in a couple of months, let's get all this rain out of the way, before the spring contest. JJ My take on low passes not necessary for landing? If they are 500 feet away from people (or vessels, vehicles, and structures people are inside) then pilot discretion. Some runways (McClellan former AFB, Castle, Avenal) have plenty of space and even the taxiways are far from where a low pass is done. I fly low a lot. My goal is always more common sense than pure regulation: don't ever make any person on the ground feel threatened by the aircraft. If there is a chance a vessel, vehicle, or structure is occupied, avoid pointing at it and turn away from it as I get close. Would I do a low pass over another aircraft on the runway, near aircraft on taxiways, or over a motorhome parked at the end of the runway? No way. Do I try very hard to avoid overflying people or aircraft even during landing? Yes I do. Can one do a low pass safely less than 500 feet from random kids and dogs who may enjoy runing out onto the runway to watch (as there are no airshow CAP cadets to hold them back)? Maybe. I dunno. I have landed a few times and been very, very frightened by the thought of my wing decapitating some eager spectators whose distance perception is foiled by their camera viewfinder. And this was technically leagal! Eeek! Lots of energy and speed during the pass maybe gives more control to avoid a collision than during landing, so maybe it is actually safer. But if I were a CD, I'd probably encourage pilots to do this, if at all, 500 feet laterally from any people. I think that is still close enough to look cool, right? This fencepost business and the idea that a fencepost is a 91.119 'structure' sounds like urban pilot legend to me. I'll stack my AOPA legal team against that blather any day ![]() Oh, and I'm gonna bring my silly red reflective vest to Avenal and wear it during the contest if I'm wandering around the runway near you silent supersonic white scythes of death, ok? ![]() -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
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