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#1
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Dear All,
Could you please help me answering the question below? An idea drills me to build an aerobatic plane with crazy or funny design, specially dedicated to participation in air shows, festivals, public celebrations, etc. But, most likely, maximum airworthiness level that it will get is experimental one, because type certification is too expensive for a series of one or two. As far as I know, FAA doesn't allow commercial usage of experimental planes. Does a legal way exist to earn money with experimental plane flying at public events? E.g. in USA, Europe, Canada, Brazil, etc...? I cannot find the straight way in the laws, but actually I see that many military aerobatic teams, flying planes without FAR certificates, really do it... Thank you in advance Eugene Maslov http://www.people.nnov.ru/maslov |
#3
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Ron Wanttaja wrote in message . ..
http://provide.net/~pratt1/ambuilt/8130-27.htm Thanks a lot, Ron! The order states that a moratorium exists on experimental airworthiness certification of non-U.S. manufactured aircraft for the experimental purpose of exhibition. Is the moratorium still in force, requiring manufacturing the plane un the USA? Eugene |
#4
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On 29 May 2005 05:51:28 -0700, (Eugene Maslov) wrote:
Ron Wanttaja wrote in message . .. http://provide.net/~pratt1/ambuilt/8130-27.htm Thanks a lot, Ron! The order states that a moratorium exists on experimental airworthiness certification of non-U.S. manufactured aircraft for the experimental purpose of exhibition. Is the moratorium still in force, requiring manufacturing the plane un the USA? I confess I'm not that knowledgeable on the Experimental/Exhibition, but my understanding is this moratorium was primarily aimed at the importation of foreign-built military jets. I looked in the FAA registration database, and over 400 planes have received Experimental/Exhibition certification since that Order came out...many of them from foreign manufacturers. My guess is that you'll have no extraordinary problems, but no one in this newsgroup has FAA decision authority. Your best bet would be to get in direct contact with the FAA and lay out what you want to do. Ron Wanttaja |
#5
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![]() Many gliders are in this category, including my own, and many licensed in the last few years. The biggest differences between my Experimental Racing/Exhibition and a friend's Standard Airworthiness glider is that I can work on my glider legally, and I can have it inspected annually by an A&P without IA authority. T o d d P a t t i s t Todd. Do you still need a program letter? Scott |
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