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#1
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Yesterday I was out flying Acro with my instructor and allegedly we violated Class B airspace.
We were doing three series sequences at 3000 and the Class B floor where we were was at 4000. The seqeunce consisted of a "Sharks Tooth" to an "Immelman" followed by a "Spin". Upon completion of the Sharks Tooth I began to setup for the Immelman. I started the brisk pull-up and noticed a jet flying above me at a distance of approximately 1000-1500 ft away. After completing the manuever, I glanced back to my 6-7 O'clock and saw the jet pass by at an altitude still slightly above us. This is key, because I am 99% certain the jet (later on learned it was a G4) was above me. We proceeded back home and after calling regional approach we are given a phone number and instructed to call once back on the ground. My instructor, who by the way is an airshow veteran and has over 24,000 hours under his belt was also certain that we were not above the jet. We headed over to a local restaurant and called the number. I initially spoke with the controller. Apparently the jet had called us in and and he was flying at 4000ft. The controller said that the jet's TCAS reported us exactly at 4000 and so did the controllers mode C. I tried to explain to the controller that we were certainly beneath the jet and given the performance of our aircraft (8KCAB Super Decathlon) it would not have been possible for us to be above him given the manuveurs were doing and given our entry altitudes. I handed the phone over to my instructor and he discussed with the controller for about 10 minutes. The controller got all my information and said that I would be receiving a call or a letter in the near future. I am really concerned about the whole situation and am wondering what the consequences of this incident could be. Given that I was receiving dual at the time, who is liable? Also, I truly have a very hard time believing that we were at 4000. However given that he reported us at 4000 and not 4100 or above, technically if we were in class B, then we would have only violated it by 1ft. This is obviously a very fine line and there must be some slight discrepancies in the accuracy of Mode C altitude encoding capability. I am not one who does not respect the rules of the FAA and am cognizant of the importance of Class B and the lives put in jeopardy if class B airspace is violated. If I would have been flying the manuveurs on my own, there is no way I would have felt comfortable flying beneath the class B shelf and normally if I am without my instructor I head out much farther where I have more room to execute the manuveurs. However, given that I was instructed to fly the manuveurs there and given that I relied upon his experience and knowledge, I felt comfortable. Anyone with any experience in such a situation? What could realistically happen? What could the worst case scenario be? Am I a liable or is my flight instructor liable? |
#2
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In article , Charlie45
wrote: Yesterday I was out flying Acro with my instructor and allegedly we violated Class B airspace. What could the worst case scenario be? Am I a liable or is my flight instructor liable? Best-case is the controller just drops it. Worst case scenario is that you're found in violation of the Class B, and receive disciplinary action. You should IMMEDIATELY send in an Aviation Safety Reporting System report. If you're not familiar, it's a program administered by NASA, and will protect you from disciplinary action, assuming you haven't had any violations in the past five years. You'll still have the violation if that's what becomes of this, but you won't be subject to the disciplinary action, such as license suspension. Here's the form to fill out, which must be submitted within 10 days of the event: http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/forms/PDF_Files/general.pdf Here's more on the program and what it does: http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/overview_nf.htm FAA Advisory Circular 00-46D gives the FAA's take on the program (I hope this link works): http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory.../rgAdvisoryCir cular.nsf/0/64358057433FE192862569E7006DA716?OpenDocument Here's the relevant paragraph (#9) from that AC: c. The filing of a report with NASA concerning an incident or occurrence involving a violation of 49 U.S.C. Subtitle VII, or the FAR is considered by FAA to be indicative of a constructive attitude. Such an attitude will tend to prevent Mure violations. Accordingly, although a tiding of violation may be made, neither a civil penalty nor certificate suspension will be imposed if (1) the violation was inadvertent and not deliberate;. (2) the violation did not involve a criminal offense,& accident, or action under 49 U.S.C. Section 44709 which discloses a lack of qualification or competency, which is wholly excluded from this policy; (3) the person has not been found in any prior FAA enforcement action to have committed a violation of 49 U.S.C. Subtitle VII, or any regulation promulgated there for a period of 5 years prior to the date of occurrence; and (4) the person proves that, within 10 days after the violation, he or she completed and delivered or mailed a written report of the incident or occurrence to NASA under ASRS. See paragraphs SC and 7b. Hope that helps. -- Garner R. Miller ATP/CFII/MEI Clifton Park, NY =USA= http://www.garnermiller.com/ |
#3
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Also, your allowed 125 foot descrepancy with your altimeter and encoder.
Your altimeter may have read 3900 feet and your encoder indicated 4000 ft. You were probably not in class b if your encoder was reporting 4000ft. Most encoders click off the next altitude anywhere from 75 to 50 feet before reaching that altitude, ie 3950 on altimeter and 4000 being reported by the encoder. Again, your allowed by the FARs to have a 125 ft difference between the encoder and altimeter. Hope this helps Dave Garner Miller wrote: In article , Charlie45 wrote: Yesterday I was out flying Acro with my instructor and allegedly we violated Class B airspace. What could the worst case scenario be? Am I a liable or is my flight instructor liable? Best-case is the controller just drops it. Worst case scenario is that you're found in violation of the Class B, and receive disciplinary action. You should IMMEDIATELY send in an Aviation Safety Reporting System report. If you're not familiar, it's a program administered by NASA, and will protect you from disciplinary action, assuming you haven't had any violations in the past five years. You'll still have the violation if that's what becomes of this, but you won't be subject to the disciplinary action, such as license suspension. Here's the form to fill out, which must be submitted within 10 days of the event: http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/forms/PDF_Files/general.pdf Here's more on the program and what it does: http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/overview_nf.htm FAA Advisory Circular 00-46D gives the FAA's take on the program (I hope this link works): http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory.../rgAdvisoryCir cular.nsf/0/64358057433FE192862569E7006DA716?OpenDocument Here's the relevant paragraph (#9) from that AC: c. The filing of a report with NASA concerning an incident or occurrence involving a violation of 49 U.S.C. Subtitle VII, or the FAR is considered by FAA to be indicative of a constructive attitude. Such an attitude will tend to prevent Mure violations. Accordingly, although a tiding of violation may be made, neither a civil penalty nor certificate suspension will be imposed if (1) the violation was inadvertent and not deliberate;. (2) the violation did not involve a criminal offense,& accident, or action under 49 U.S.C. Section 44709 which discloses a lack of qualification or competency, which is wholly excluded from this policy; (3) the person has not been found in any prior FAA enforcement action to have committed a violation of 49 U.S.C. Subtitle VII, or any regulation promulgated there for a period of 5 years prior to the date of occurrence; and (4) the person proves that, within 10 days after the violation, he or she completed and delivered or mailed a written report of the incident or occurrence to NASA under ASRS. See paragraphs SC and 7b. Hope that helps. |
#4
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As a former DPE, I've seen a few of these actions in the past. The FAA usually will be satisfied with the PIC taking remedial training. But in the future, I would not talk to the FAA without first consulting an aviation attorney. And as another poster said, fill out a NASA report immediately! |
#5
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Thank you guys for the prompt feedback. I will file the form and keep you all posted how all of this pans out. Thanks. |
#6
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So I spoke with an aviation attorney. He recommended that I hold off on filing the NASA safety report at the moment. Given the situation and that I really don't believe that I violated class Bravo it would not be prudent to file the form until I receive the letter from the FAA. The thought behind this is that I would be admitting to the violation if I were to file the safety report. I will wait until I have the letter and see what happens from there...
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#7
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 17:17:39 +0000, Charlie45
wrote: Yesterday I was out flying Acro with my instructor and allegedly we violated Class B airspace. We were doing three series sequences at 3000 and the Class B floor where we were was at 4000. The seqeunce consisted of a "Sharks Tooth" to an "Immelman" followed by a "Spin". Upon completion of the Sharks Tooth I began to setup for the Immelman. I started the brisk pull-up and noticed a jet flying above me at a distance of approximately 1000-1500 ft away. After completing the manuever, I glanced back to my 6-7 O'clock and saw the jet pass by at an altitude still slightly above us. This is key, because I am 99% certain the jet (later on learned it was a G4) was above me. We proceeded back home and after calling regional approach we are given a phone number and instructed to call once back on the ground. My instructor, who by the way is an airshow veteran and has over 24,000 hours under his belt was also certain that we were not above the jet. We headed over to a local restaurant and called the number. I initially spoke with the controller. Apparently the jet had called us in and and he was flying at 4000ft. The controller said that the jet's TCAS reported us exactly at 4000 and so did the controllers mode C. I tried to explain to the controller that we were certainly beneath the jet and given the performance of our aircraft (8KCAB Super Decathlon) it would not have been possible for us to be above him given the manuveurs were doing and given our entry altitudes. I handed the phone over to my instructor and he discussed with the controller for about 10 minutes. The controller got all my information and said that I would be receiving a call or a letter in the near future. I am really concerned about the whole situation and am wondering what the consequences of this incident could be. Given that I was receiving dual at the time, who is liable? Also, I truly have a very hard time believing that we were at 4000. However given that he reported us at 4000 and not 4100 or above, technically if we were in class B, then we would have only violated it by 1ft. This is obviously a very fine line and there must be some slight discrepancies in the accuracy of Mode C altitude encoding capability. I am not one who does not respect the rules of the FAA and am cognizant of the importance of Class B and the lives put in jeopardy if class B airspace is violated. If I would have been flying the manuveurs on my own, there is no way I would have felt comfortable flying beneath the class B shelf and normally if I am without my instructor I head out much farther where I have more room to execute the manuveurs. However, given that I was instructed to fly the manuveurs there and given that I relied upon his experience and knowledge, I felt comfortable. Anyone with any experience in such a situation? What could realistically happen? What could the worst case scenario be? Am I a liable or is my flight instructor liable? Aerobatics in proximity to controlled traffic is not good. Preoccupation is what gets crews flying into iron clouds. Your instructor collects more approbation than you it seems. But disclosing in public also shows a positive safety attitude. If they shoot you, the remaining troops will presumably be encouraged to sin no more - to mangle Napoleon's sentiment. Was there no radio link that could have alerted the controlled traffic, I wonder? Was there no place else to practice? All the same, I think they will treat you gently. Good Luck Brian |
#8
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Be sure to contact AOPA's Legal Services folks if you purchased the coverage ($26/yr is cheap for a PP!) and get them involved! They will make sure you are headed in the right direction. If you have not purchased that coverage, then don't call them for this incident, but purchase it for next time! Also, Fill out that ASRS! I've actually taken to the practice of keeping 1-2 forms in my flight bag, just in case. Chris Charlie45 wrote: awsummerfield Wrote: The worst would be disciplinary action, certificate suspension, etc. But realistically, as a student, you would be given additional training. Your CFI, if he was acting as PIC (he had valid medical, license, etc) would be liable for any FAA actions. If you were acting as PIC because your CFI did NOT have the medical, then you may be considered as PIC, and would then be liable. As a former DPE, I've seen a few of these actions in the past. The FAA usually will be satisfied with the PIC taking remedial training. But in the future, I would not talk to the FAA without first consulting an aviation attorney. And as another poster said, fill out a NASA report immediately! Thank you guys for the prompt feedback. I will file the form and keep you all posted how all of this pans out. Thanks. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFDZ8SYMhhgBf/D8rsRAk7iAKCFrKydkBOI2btX08eYdfkh7aVJPwCdHoNr EFNLmnBIGWlFYZ9No5w2u2c= =64ZT -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#9
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In article ,
Charlie45 wrote: So I spoke with an aviation attorney. He recommended that I hold off on filing the NASA safety report at the moment. Given the situation and that I really don't believe that I violated class Bravo it would not be prudent to file the form until I receive the letter from the FAA. The thought behind this is that I would be admitting to the violation if I were to file the safety report. I will wait until I have the letter and see what happens from there... BAD ADVICE! File the report and keep the slip, as you have only 10 days to file and receive immunity. ASRS maintains strict confidentiality, so filing the report will not affect guilt or innocence. If you receive the letter from FAA, you can respond that you filed the ASRS report and, at worst, use that fact to "get out of jail for free." If you wait for the letter, you cannot receive immunity, if it takes more than 10 days from the event. |
#10
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Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article , Charlie45 wrote: So I spoke with an aviation attorney. He recommended that I hold off on filing the NASA safety report at the moment. Given the situation and that I really don't believe that I violated class Bravo it would not be prudent to file the form until I receive the letter from the FAA. The thought behind this is that I would be admitting to the violation if I were to file the safety report. I will wait until I have the letter and see what happens from there... BAD ADVICE! File the report and keep the slip, as you have only 10 days to file and receive immunity. ASRS maintains strict confidentiality, so filing the report will not affect guilt or innocence. If you receive the letter from FAA, you can respond that you filed the ASRS report and, at worst, use that fact to "get out of jail for free." If you wait for the letter, you cannot receive immunity, if it takes more than 10 days from the event. Also, I believe the act of filing an ASRS report cannot be used as a basis for prosecuting you. Thus, the safety value of the report exceeds the penal value. |
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