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I'm planning a flight from the US West Coast to Alaska this summer in my US
registered homebuilt. Depending on weather, I may have to make a stop in Canada. According to AOPA's website, US law requires private airplanes operating outside the US to have an FCC radio license for the airplane and another for the pilot. What are the chances that anyone in Canada is going to care about the licenses? Since the only requirement to get the aircraft license is to pay $60, there doesn't seem to be any operational benefit of the license, other than satisfying bureaucratic silliness. Anybody flown their US registered airplane into Canada lately and needed the license? Thanks, Dennis Johnson |
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On Feb 11, 9:17*pm, "Dennis Johnson" wrote:
I'm planning a flight from the US West Coast to Alaska this summer in my US registered homebuilt. *Depending on weather, I may have to make a stop in Canada. According to AOPA's website, US law requires private airplanes operating outside the US to have an FCC radio license for the airplane and another for the pilot. *What are the chances that anyone in Canada is going to care about the licenses? *Since the only requirement to get the aircraft license is to pay $60, there doesn't seem to be any operational benefit of the license, other than satisfying bureaucratic silliness. *Anybody flown their US registered airplane into Canada lately and needed the license? I think technically both the airplane AND you need a license. The pilot's radio license is a bit more expensive. However, I've never been asked for this when traveling in Canada and Mexico. I don't think that anyone in either county has ever even heard of this requirement. There are a few (very reasonable) requirements before flying into Canada. However, the real song&dance happens when you return to the US. Make sure you are up on the latest US Customs procedures and give them a call ahead of time. -Robert |
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Dennis Johnson wrote:
I'm planning a flight from the US West Coast to Alaska this summer in my US registered homebuilt. Depending on weather, I may have to make a stop in Canada. According to AOPA's website, US law requires private airplanes operating outside the US to have an FCC radio license for the airplane and another for the pilot. What are the chances that anyone in Canada is going to care about the licenses? Since the only requirement to get the aircraft license is to pay $60, there doesn't seem to be any operational benefit of the license, other than satisfying bureaucratic silliness. Anybody flown their US registered airplane into Canada lately and needed the license? What's the operational benefit of a driver's license? Unless you are non-profit, the fee in $110 for 10 years. http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/ind...craft_stations You might want to read this article: http://www.popularaviation.com/ListN...Dtl.asp?id=211 It also appears homebuilts require extra paperwork. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Canada/US license reciprocity? | John T Lowry | Piloting | 5 | January 26th 05 12:49 PM |
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Radio license required? | Marty Ross | Instrument Flight Rules | 10 | July 17th 03 09:58 PM |
Radio license required? | Marty Ross | Piloting | 10 | July 17th 03 09:58 PM |