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On Sep 12, 3:48*am, jan olieslagers
wrote: Mike Ash schreef: The flight of aircraft is "subject to restrictions" everywhere within the US and most other countries. For example, can't PIC without a valid pilot's certificate. Can't fly inside clouds while VFR. Do these restrictions make the whole country a "restricted area"? Of course not! "Restricted area" has a specific meaning in the US. It is specific airspace which has special restrictions applied beyond those found in normal airspace. On a sectional you will find restricted airspace to be designated using a solid blue border with perpendicular blue dashes pointing toward the inside. For an example, pull up NHK on skyvector.com. Indeed I think there's confusion between the linguistical significance of "restricted" and the more strict interpretation in aviation regulations. For this once, though, I believe the term stems from ICAO terminology and thus isn't limited to the USA. A agree, area implies a ground reference. Airspace is often restricted from certain actvities outside normal flight. Cheers |
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In article
, "Flaps_50!" wrote: On Sep 12, 3:48*am, jan olieslagers wrote: Mike Ash schreef: The flight of aircraft is "subject to restrictions" everywhere within the US and most other countries. For example, can't PIC without a valid pilot's certificate. Can't fly inside clouds while VFR. Do these restrictions make the whole country a "restricted area"? Of course not! "Restricted area" has a specific meaning in the US. It is specific airspace which has special restrictions applied beyond those found in normal airspace. On a sectional you will find restricted airspace to be designated using a solid blue border with perpendicular blue dashes pointing toward the inside. For an example, pull up NHK on skyvector.com. Indeed I think there's confusion between the linguistical significance of "restricted" and the more strict interpretation in aviation regulations. For this once, though, I believe the term stems from ICAO terminology and thus isn't limited to the USA. A agree, area implies a ground reference. Airspace is often restricted from certain actvities outside normal flight. I did not say that "area implies a ground reference". I said that restricted airspace is a specifically designated type of airspace by the FAA in the United States. A restricted area is synonymous with an area of restricted airspace. Let me put this as simply as I possibly can: restricted area, and restricted airspace, when in the context of aviation in the US, mean a specific type of airspace designated as "restricted" by the FAA. This airspace has a special designation on sectional charts. Class A, B, C, D, E, and G airspaces are not restricted airspaces. Victor airways are not restricted airspace. There is no restricted airspace anywhere near KJAN. You want to discuss "airspace where aerobatic flight is restricted" then go for it, but USE A DIFFERENT TERM FOR IT. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
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