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#1
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I remember as a kid we used to make our own kites and fly them pretty
high. Several spools of heavy twine was used. I wish we had cordless drills to use to wind them back in. I seem to remember it took forever to get them down. Didn't know anything about FARs back then. Ross Jim Logajan wrote: "Skylune" wrote: I saw a few kids flying kites over the weekend. It occurred to me: What if they were flying the kites real high in the vicinity of GA airports? I don't think there are any laws about kite flying off airport property. There are laws that cover kite flying under certain conditions - airports are in fact covered by the regs. Relevant regs are in FAR part 101 "Moored balloons, kites, unmanned rockets and unmanned free balloons". Quotes from some specific sections (see the FAR for the entire section): "§ 101.13 Operating limitations. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, no person may operate a moored balloon or kite— (1) Less than 500 feet from the base of any cloud; (2) More than 500 feet above the surface of the earth; (3) From an area where the ground visibility is less than three miles; or (4) Within five miles of the boundary of any airport. (b) Paragraph (a) of this section does not apply to the operation of a balloon or kite below the top of any structure and within 250 feet of it, if that shielded operation does not obscure any lighting on the structure." § 101.15 Notice requirements. No person may operate an unshielded moored balloon or kite more than 150 feet above the surface of the earth unless, at least 24 hours before beginning the operation, he gives the following information to the FAA ATC facility that is nearest to the place of intended operation: (a) The names and addresses of the owners and operators. (b) The size of the balloon or the size and weight of the kite. (c) The location of the operation. (d) The height above the surface of the earth at which the balloon or kite is to be operated. (e) The date, time, and duration of the operation. § 101.17 Lighting and marking requirements. (a) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite, between sunset and sunrise unless the balloon or kite, and its mooring lines, are lighted so as to give a visual warning equal to that required for obstructions to air navigation in the FAA publication “Obstruction Marking and Lighting”. (b) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite between sunrise and sunset unless its mooring lines have colored pennants or streamers attached at not more than 50 foot intervals beginning at 150 feet above the surface of the earth and visible for at least one mile. " |
#2
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We had Green Giant kites that we got by sending in vegetable can labels. We
used monofilament line. We had an old bicycle that we converted the back wheel into a spool, so we could reel in the line. It sounds like that wasn't legal either. One question however. When you read the FARS, it talks about "moored balloons or kite". One could argue that a typical kite that is hand held, is not moored. Mike Schumann "Ross Richardson" wrote in message ... I remember as a kid we used to make our own kites and fly them pretty high. Several spools of heavy twine was used. I wish we had cordless drills to use to wind them back in. I seem to remember it took forever to get them down. Didn't know anything about FARs back then. Ross Jim Logajan wrote: "Skylune" wrote: I saw a few kids flying kites over the weekend. It occurred to me: What if they were flying the kites real high in the vicinity of GA airports? I don't think there are any laws about kite flying off airport property. There are laws that cover kite flying under certain conditions - airports are in fact covered by the regs. Relevant regs are in FAR part 101 "Moored balloons, kites, unmanned rockets and unmanned free balloons". Quotes from some specific sections (see the FAR for the entire section): "§ 101.13 Operating limitations. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, no person may operate a moored balloon or kite— (1) Less than 500 feet from the base of any cloud; (2) More than 500 feet above the surface of the earth; (3) From an area where the ground visibility is less than three miles; or (4) Within five miles of the boundary of any airport. (b) Paragraph (a) of this section does not apply to the operation of a balloon or kite below the top of any structure and within 250 feet of it, if that shielded operation does not obscure any lighting on the structure." § 101.15 Notice requirements. No person may operate an unshielded moored balloon or kite more than 150 feet above the surface of the earth unless, at least 24 hours before beginning the operation, he gives the following information to the FAA ATC facility that is nearest to the place of intended operation: (a) The names and addresses of the owners and operators. (b) The size of the balloon or the size and weight of the kite. (c) The location of the operation. (d) The height above the surface of the earth at which the balloon or kite is to be operated. (e) The date, time, and duration of the operation. § 101.17 Lighting and marking requirements. (a) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite, between sunset and sunrise unless the balloon or kite, and its mooring lines, are lighted so as to give a visual warning equal to that required for obstructions to air navigation in the FAA publication “Obstruction Marking and Lighting”. (b) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite between sunrise and sunset unless its mooring lines have colored pennants or streamers attached at not more than 50 foot intervals beginning at 150 feet above the surface of the earth and visible for at least one mile. " |
#3
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![]() "Mike Schumann" wrote We had Green Giant kites that we got by sending in vegetable can labels. Yep, that (Green Giant) and many box kites were my favorites. I don't remember how many rolls of string I had up on those, but it was many. The box kite had to have a lot of wind, but if there was too much, it would break the string. -- Jim in NC |
#4
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LOL. So the kids I saw were in violation of the FARS!!! That is
hysterical. Kids flying kites should study the FARs. LOL. Perhaps the kite fliers should include copies of the FARs with the kite. |
#5
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On 2006-04-19, Skylune wrote:
LOL. So the kids I saw were in violation of the FARS!!! That is hysterical. Why is it hysterical? Kids flying kites should study the FARs. LOL. If you engage in any activity at any age, it behooves you (or your guardian, in the case of kids) to at least have a passing awareness of laws that may be governing you. Flying kites on 1000 foot strings on an airport departure path is every bit as brain dead as letting your kids ride their bikes on the wrong side of a main road. -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
#6
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by Dylan Smith Apr 19, 2006 at 02:29 PM
On 2006-04-19, Skylune wrote: LOL. So the kids I saw were in violation of the FARS!!! That is hysterical. Why is it hysterical? Kids flying kites should study the FARs. LOL. If you engage in any activity at any age, it behooves you (or your guardian, in the case of kids) to at least have a passing awareness of laws that may be governing you. Flying kites on 1000 foot strings on an airport departure path is every bit as brain dead as letting your kids ride their bikes on the wrong side of a main road It is ludicrous because the rules say you cannot fly a kite within 5 miles of the airport boundary, not simply off the departure and arrival ends of the runway. 5 miles! LOL. The kite manufacturers should have liability warnings on the kites. Who on earth could know that? I suppose there are rules against raising carrier pigeons near GA airports also. If those stupid little new hover crafts become popular, I am sure that the FAA will somehow limit their usage as well. What about small model planes? Are these also restricted? Damn, I'm starting to understand why the STN people say that GA airports should be required to purchase all land in a 25 mile radius. ;-) |
#7
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On 2006-04-19, Skylune wrote:
It is ludicrous because the rules say you cannot fly a kite within 5 miles of the airport boundary, not simply off the departure and arrival ends of the runway. 5 miles! LOL. No it doesn't say that at all. I suggest you read 14 CFR 101.13 *in full*. In particular paragraph (b). You most certainly CAN fly a kite within 5 miles of an airfield boundary. Paragraph (b) lists the common sense exceptions. that the FAA will somehow limit their usage as well. What about small model planes? Are these also restricted? There are regulations on model planes, too, as far as the altitude they can be flown at. They are, after all, in the air committing aviation, so this is in the FAA's domain. Why do you think it's stupid, ludicrous or somehow hysterical that kites and models (both potentially dangerous objects) have some kind of regulations from the administration that happens to regulate the airspace they fly in? -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
#8
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"Skylune" wrote:
What about small model planes? Are these also restricted? Oddly enough, I can find no regulations specifically mentioning RC planes. The obvious regs, such as for ultralight vehicles, specifically state that they are applicable only to manned vehicles. Perhaps you or others could search the regulations and come up with the relevant cites and post them here - I had no luck finding anything covering unmanned aerial vehicles: http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text...4/14tab_02.tpl |
#9
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Getting a little off topic here. I once saw a doctor and his child
flying a kite right in the easement path of power distribution lines. It got to me so much that I had to stop and tell him how dangerous that was. He said that he understood and had it under control. What some people will do, even educated ones. Ross KSWI Skylune wrote: by Dylan Smith Apr 19, 2006 at 02:29 PM On 2006-04-19, Skylune wrote: LOL. So the kids I saw were in violation of the FARS!!! That is hysterical. Why is it hysterical? Kids flying kites should study the FARs. LOL. If you engage in any activity at any age, it behooves you (or your guardian, in the case of kids) to at least have a passing awareness of laws that may be governing you. Flying kites on 1000 foot strings on an airport departure path is every bit as brain dead as letting your kids ride their bikes on the wrong side of a main road It is ludicrous because the rules say you cannot fly a kite within 5 miles of the airport boundary, not simply off the departure and arrival ends of the runway. 5 miles! LOL. The kite manufacturers should have liability warnings on the kites. Who on earth could know that? I suppose there are rules against raising carrier pigeons near GA airports also. If those stupid little new hover crafts become popular, I am sure that the FAA will somehow limit their usage as well. What about small model planes? Are these also restricted? Damn, I'm starting to understand why the STN people say that GA airports should be required to purchase all land in a 25 mile radius. ;-) |
#10
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by Jim Logajan Apr 18, 2006 at 09:56 PM
There are laws that cover kite flying under certain conditions - airports are in fact covered by the regs. Relevant regs are in FAR part 101 "Moored balloons, kites, unmanned rockets and unmanned free balloons". Quotes from some specific sections (see the FAR for the entire section): "§ 101.13 Operating limitations. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, no person may operate a moored balloon or kite— (1) Less than 500 feet from the base of any cloud; (2) More than 500 feet above the surface of the earth; (3) From an area where the ground visibility is less than three miles; or (4) Within five miles of the boundary of any airport. (b) Paragraph (a) of this section does not apply to the operation of a balloon or kite below the top of any structure and within 250 feet of it, if that shielded operation does not obscure any lighting on the structure." § 101.15 Notice requirements. No person may operate an unshielded moored balloon or kite more than 150 feet above the surface of the earth unless, at least 24 hours before beginning the operation, he gives the following information to the FAA ATC facility that is nearest to the place of intended operation: (a) The names and addresses of the owners and operators. (b) The size of the balloon or the size and weight of the kite. (c) The location of the operation. (d) The height above the surface of the earth at which the balloon or kite is to be operated. (e) The date, time, and duration of the operation. § 101.17 Lighting and marking requirements. (a) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite, between sunset and sunrise unless the balloon or kite, and its mooring lines, are lighted so as to give a visual warning equal to that required for obstructions to air navigation in the FAA publication “Obstruction Marking and Lighting”. (b) No person may operate a moored balloon or kite between sunrise and sunset unless its mooring lines have colored pennants or streamers attached at not more than 50 foot intervals beginning at 150 feet above the surface of the earth and visible for at least one mile. " It would seem to me that kite manufacturers are at risk of a lawsuit if they don't post all these legal restrictions on their products. Doubtful a collision with a kite would cause a crash, but it could present a distraction for pilots that like to buzz low over the treetops. I wonder if a collision with a kite is an FAA reportable incident. And, would that then constitute sufficient proof of illegal low flying? |
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