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#11
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On Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:29:01 -0800, Todd wrote:
A few days ago I was looking for something unrelated and came across this document (a bit old) that may help you. This one is canceled, but it may help lead you to the current procedure. The document: 8130.15 dated 09/14/1979 Airworthiness Certification of "Prematurely" Exported Gliders http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...dance_Library/ rgOrders.nsf/0/A92F26AB98C2B4958625756D00670ACB? OpenDocument&Highlight=8130 You might also try a google search like: convert type certificate experimental site:faa.gov Thats an excellent find, the document deals with exactly the circumstance that I anticipated having problems with, thank you for posting, and I'm sure many others out there will gain confidence in being able to put a glider through a similar procedure now that an official FAA document details a route through the process... updating it is the next challenge :-) Many thanks, Peter |
#12
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On Wed, 13 Jan 2010 17:34:56 -0800, unclhank wrote:
On Jan 12, 11:02Â*pm, shkdriver wrote: Anyone ever purchase a used glider with an experimental certificate,say for example, an ASW 19b, and change to a standard certificate? I understand that some gliders were imported and flown as experimental such as jantars, due to govermental restrictions on reciprocal airworthiness circumstance. The ASW 19b has been given U.S. standard certificates. Just wondering Scott W. -- shkdriver The question I would ask is why? '19 is old enough that it would almost certainly have a permanent Experimental C of A. Thus no need for program letters and such. Condition inspection by A&P, IA not required. I would be astonished if it would add any value. Only reason I can think of might be a life insurance policy that says - no experimental aircraft. FWIW UH I believe that its not possible to export a glider (actually not possible to obtain an Certificate of Airworthiness for Export from the USA), for an aircraft that is on the experimental register. The FAA will only issue them for standard airworthiness compliant aircraft. So, in my case, if I ever decided to take a glider back to England, I'd have to go through this process before I could think about shipping it. Peter |
#13
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On Thu, 14 Jan 2010 07:45:18 +0000, Peter wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:29:01 -0800, Todd wrote: A few days ago I was looking for something unrelated and came across this document (a bit old) that may help you. This one is canceled, but it may help lead you to the current procedure. The document: 8130.15 dated 09/14/1979 Airworthiness Certification of "Prematurely" Exported Gliders http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...dance_Library/ rgOrders.nsf/0/A92F26AB98C2B4958625756D00670ACB? OpenDocument&Highlight=8130 You might also try a google search like: convert type certificate experimental site:faa.gov Thats an excellent find, the document deals with exactly the circumstance that I anticipated having problems with, thank you for posting, and I'm sure many others out there will gain confidence in being able to put a glider through a similar procedure now that an official FAA document details a route through the process... updating it is the next challenge :-) Many thanks, Peter Having taken a look through the FAA website I think form 8130.2F mod4, which is current, has the appropriate language and procedures in it... around page 56-63, and seems to make this transition possible even if the TCDS was issued after the glider was imported and is not referred to on the original Export CofA. Peter |
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On Jan 14, 12:48*am, Peter wrote:
I believe that its not possible to export a glider (actually not possible to obtain an Certificate of Airworthiness for Export from the USA), for an aircraft that is on the experimental register. The FAA will only issue them for standard airworthiness compliant aircraft. That seems strange. The glider entered USA without any US airworthiness certification but it cannot leave? Is it not possible, for example, to send a German manufactured glider with a US experimental certificate, back to Germany for repairs? Is this a US export restriction, or a UK import restriction? Can the glider just be de-registered in US and re-registered or re- certified in UK based on the original LBA certification? I'm interested since I may find myself in the same situation one day. Andy |
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On Jan 13, 5:34*pm, wrote:
On Jan 12, 11:02*pm, shkdriver wrote: Anyone ever purchase a used glider with an experimental certificate,say for example, an ASW 19b, and change to a standard certificate? I understand that some gliders were imported and flown as experimental such as jantars, due to govermental restrictions on reciprocal airworthiness circumstance. The ASW 19b has been given U.S. standard certificates. Just wondering Scott W. -- shkdriver The question I would ask is why? '19 is old enough that it would almost certainly have a permanent Experimental C of A. Thus no need for program letters and such. Condition inspection by A&P, IA not required. I would be astonished if it would add any value. Only reason I can think of might be a life insurance policy that says - no experimental aircraft. FWIW UH Thank you! I've been DYING to ask that very question. I'm a relative noob in the arena of glider ownership. I've owned an experimental since 2004, and can't for the life of me see any advantage to having a type certificate. |
#16
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On Jan 14, 10:06*am, Uncle Fuzzy wrote:
On Jan 13, 5:34*pm, wrote: On Jan 12, 11:02*pm, shkdriver wrote: Anyone ever purchase a used glider with an experimental certificate,say for example, an ASW 19b, and change to a standard certificate? I understand that some gliders were imported and flown as experimental such as jantars, due to govermental restrictions on reciprocal airworthiness circumstance. The ASW 19b has been given U.S. standard certificates. Just wondering Scott W. -- shkdriver The question I would ask is why? '19 is old enough that it would almost certainly have a permanent Experimental C of A. Thus no need for program letters and such. Condition inspection by A&P, IA not required. I would be astonished if it would add any value. Only reason I can think of might be a life insurance policy that says - no experimental aircraft. FWIW UH Thank you! *I've been DYING to ask that very question. *I'm a relative noob in the arena of glider ownership. *I've owned an experimental since 2004, and can't for the life of me see any advantage to having a type certificate.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The only potential advantage may be avoiding an FAA inspector deciding he has to do a check on your Ex glider every year which sounds like it could be coming in some areas. The tone I get from our local "helpers" is that they feel they need to provide significant supervision of how aircraft licensed in this catagory are used. They don't seem to be able to disciminate between a glider flying at a local airport and a MIG flying at an airshow. That said, if maintenance and records are done right, there should be no issue other than making ship available for inspection. Looks like a way for inspectors to get out of the office and appear to be doing something. UH |
#17
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On Thu, 14 Jan 2010 05:55:41 -0800, Andy wrote:
On Jan 14, 12:48Â*am, Peter wrote: I believe that its not possible to export a glider (actually not possible to obtain an Certificate of Airworthiness for Export from the USA), for an aircraft that is on the experimental register. The FAA will only issue them for standard airworthiness compliant aircraft. That seems strange. The glider entered USA without any US airworthiness certification but it cannot leave? No, you have the wrong end of the stick. The glider entered the USA with a German Certificate of Airworthiness for Export, this was supplied by the manufacturer as part of its export process (without which I doubt it would even get on the US experimental register) and was subsequently registered in the USA with an experimental Airworthiness (since at the time of import there was no TCDS and no way to get onto the Standard register. Is it not possible, for example, to send a German manufactured glider with a US experimental certificate, back to Germany for repairs? Of course, its possible to ship it to Germany or most other places for repair/holidays/any number of reasons, but it cannot be PERMANENTLY exported with an FAA Certificate of Airworthiness or Export unless it is transitioned from an FAA Standard Category Airworthiness Certificate. You might be able to keep it on the US register in the other country and have a US qualified Inspector give it the required annuals etc, but thats likely to be costly and insurance may be a problem, but most countries are likely to require a long term aircraft transition to the local register eventually. Is this a US export restriction, or a UK import restriction? Both I believe. US export, the FAA will only grant the Export CofA if they can be assured the aircraft is 'safe' when it leaves the USA, ie. has a current Standard Category CofA at the time export is applied for. UK import, the aircraft must be documented properly in order for it to be accepted onto the EASA Airworthiness Register, proper docs include export CofA from the country its coming from, for similar reasons, it must be 'safe' which means Export CofA. Can the glider just be de-registered in US and re-registered or re- certified in UK based on the original LBA certification? I doubt it, there would be a huge paperwork gap that would raise questions. Even if it could be done, I doubt I'd buy even a used car with such a document gap. I'm interested since I may find myself in the same situation one day. Andy Good luck with that, I have learned a lot in my research so far and no doubt have more to learn... Peter |
#18
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Peter wrote:
Of course, its possible to ship it to Germany or most other places for repair/holidays/any number of reasons, but it cannot be PERMANENTLY exported with an FAA Certificate of Airworthiness or Export unless it is transitioned from an FAA Standard Category Airworthiness Certificate. You might be able to keep it on the US register in the other country and have a US qualified Inspector give it the required annuals etc, but thats likely to be costly and insurance may be a problem, but most countries are likely to require a long term aircraft transition to the local register eventually. Is this a US export restriction, or a UK import restriction? Both I believe. US export, the FAA will only grant the Export CofA if they can be assured the aircraft is 'safe' when it leaves the USA, ie. has a current Standard Category CofA at the time export is applied for. UK import, the aircraft must be documented properly in order for it to be accepted onto the EASA Airworthiness Register, proper docs include export CofA from the country its coming from, for similar reasons, it must be 'safe' which means Export CofA. Can the glider just be dase-registered in US and re-registered or re- certified in UK based on the original LBA certification? I doubt it, there would be a huge paperwork gap that would raise questions. Even if it could be done, I doubt I'd buy even a used car with such a document gap. I'm interested since I may find myself in the same situation one day. Andy Good luck with that, I have learned a lot in my research so far and no doubt have more to learn... Peter I am pretty sure this is not true if you export to New Zealand. I exported an experimental LS-3 to NZ a few years ago, it now is flying in NZ, and there was no Export C of A. Therefore, a "document gap" is possible, at least in NZ. |
#19
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On Jan 16, 8:50*am, Greg Arnold wrote:
I am pretty sure this is not true if you export to New Zealand. *I exported an experimental LS-3 to NZ a few years ago, it now is flying in NZ, and there was no Export C of A. Therefore, a "document gap" is possible, at least in NZ. I found that FAA provides the aircraft import requirements for various states. UK is lumped in with other EU counties in this doc: http://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert...t/media/EU.pdf My take from this is that for export to UK the documentation requirements are driven by EASA not FAA. Does anyone know of a German built glider with US experimental certificate being imported from US to UK and being got though all the paperwork to get a UK registration under the current EASA rules? requirements for importing to other countries can be found here http://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert...sp_req_import/ It seems that NZ also requires an export airworthiness certification but it does not state explicitly that it must be issued by US. Is it possible that the original LBA export certificate is acceptable? Exporting US registered gliders has been common at times when the dollar is weak. Has this stopped happening because the export/import regs cannot be met? Andy |
#20
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On Jan 16, 10:11*am, Andy wrote:
On Jan 16, 8:50*am, Greg Arnold wrote: I am pretty sure this is not true if you export to New Zealand. *I exported an experimental LS-3 to NZ a few years ago, it now is flying in NZ, and there was no Export C of A. Therefore, a "document gap" is possible, at least in NZ. I found that FAA provides the aircraft import requirements for various states. *UK is lumped in with other EU counties in this doc: http://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert...rt_aw_proc/sp_... My take from this is that for export to UK the documentation requirements are driven by EASA not FAA. Does anyone know of a German built glider with US experimental certificate being imported from US to UK and being got though all the paperwork to get a UK registration under the current EASA rules? requirements for importing to other countries can be found here http://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert...rt_aw_proc/sp_... It seems that NZ also requires an export airworthiness certification but it does not state explicitly that it must be issued by US. *Is it possible that the original LBA export certificate is acceptable? Exporting US registered gliders has been common at times when the dollar is weak. *Has this stopped happening because the export/import regs cannot be met? Andy AFAIK, the only Export C of A we are concerned with in the US is the original from the country of manufacture when there is a TCDS and a standard airworthiness. On Jan 16, 1:21 am, Peter wrote: On Thu, 14 Jan 2010 05:55:41 -0800, Andy wrote: On Jan 14, 12:48 am, Peter wrote: I believe that its not possible to export a glider (actually not possible to obtain an Certificate of Airworthiness for Export from the USA), for an aircraft that is on the experimental register. The FAA will only issue them for standard airworthiness compliant aircraft. That seems strange. The glider entered USA without any US airworthiness certification but it cannot leave? No, you have the wrong end of the stick. The glider entered the USA with a German Certificate of Airworthiness for Export, this was supplied by the manufacturer as part of its export process (without which I doubt it would even get on the US experimental register) and was subsequently registered in the USA with an experimental Airworthiness (since at the time of import there was no TCDS and no way to get onto the Standard register. Export C of A is not required if a glider is initially registered as experimental in the US. There are gliders that are certificated in some countries, but not in the US, LAK-12 for example. For a standard certificate and export C of A or compliance letter from the country of manufacture is required. So it follows that exporting a US registered experimental is not eligible for an export C of A. That said, the original export C of A should satisfy the requirement, it does for US export if complete logbooks are included. A quick perusal of 14CFR21 seems to indicate that export CofA's and tags on components only apply to US production. Can you cite a reference that says an export C of A would be issued on foreign manufacture? For example, a couple of years ago I picked up an L-13 from Canada for a friend. I looked over the logbooks. The glider had been originally imported into the US and the Czech export C of A was included. The glider logged about 75 hours in the US and was exported to Canada. There was no evidence of a US export C of A. The glider was grounded at 4724.5 hours in Canada as the club was unwilling to complete another extension inspection to extend the life by 500 hours in Canada. The glider was re-imported to the US without a Canadian export C of A. The bulletins limiting the service life of this type are accepted in some countries, but are none directive in the US. AD's were never created and examples are known to be flying with over 9,000 hours. Several include parts from three or more salvages. But the important document in this chain was the original Czech export C of A and complete log books, several volumes, that recorded every flight. When I last departed the UK, I looked at bringing an IS28-B2 with me. British Aerospace once bought a half dozen for engineering training. They were low time and in 'as new' conditon, but at the time there was a 'shelf life', which has been reasonably dealt with. At that time, the export C of A from Romania was required and was in the glider records. If a German built glider had an export C of A, but was US experimental, the real problem would seem to be with any modifications that weren't approved by the manufacturer, e.g. winglets. If they were factory mods that were added in the US, then a compliance letter from Germany might suffice, but might also require a German inspection. When the BGA controlled UK gliding, it would be a simple matter for the BGA Technical Committee to approve the modification. Under EASA, no idea what that implies. Frank Whiteley |
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