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#1
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As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter
setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site: www.eglider.org Tom Knauff |
#2
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On Jan 26, 6:33*am, Tom wrote:
As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site:www.eglider.org Tom Knauff 91.121 is pretty clear that the only time an altimeter should be set to zero is if you are taking off from sea level |
#3
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On Jan 26, 7:33*am, Tom wrote:
As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site:www.eglider.org Tom Knauff Why not just post the FAA response here? |
#4
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On Jan 26, 7:37*am, Tony wrote:
On Jan 26, 6:33*am, Tom wrote: As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site:www.eglider.org Tom Knauff 91.121 is pretty clear that the only time an altimeter should be set to zero is if you are taking off from sea level- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The only reason I even opened this was because I couldn't believe it was being re-addressed.....again. It's a non-issue for me, because: 1) The club instructors teach altimeter setting as it is presented in the FARs, and 2) I've never seen an altimeter that could be adjusted the nearly three thousand feet it would take to reach zero. |
#5
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When R.A.S.is too quiet?
:-) Pete "Tom" wrote in message ... As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site: www.eglider.org Tom Knauff |
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On Jan 26, 10:37*am, Mike Schumann wrote:
On Jan 26, 7:33*am, Tom wrote: As a glider pilot, when are you allowed to use a zero altimeter setting? Back in July, I asked the FAA for a legal opinion regarding FAR 91.121. Yesterday, I finally received a response. There is reason for a continued dialog, and I am continuing the discussion with the FAA legal department. This Saturday, immediately prior to the third Glider Safety Webinar,I will provide subscribers to the webinar the exact wording of the FAA response. To join us in this discussion, please sign up for the third webinar on our web site:www.eglider.org Tom Knauff Why not just post the FAA response here? Because then you would have no reason to attend the webinar! |
#7
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As stated in the original message, I am still resolving issues with
FAA legal. Caustic remarks aside, this is an issue with many pilots, and the issue is more than the words used in the current regulation. Tom Knauff |
#8
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On Jan 26, 5:10*pm, Tom wrote:
As stated in the original message, I am still resolving issues with FAA legal. Caustic remarks aside, this is an issue with many pilots, and the issue is more than the words used in the current regulation. Tom Knauff So once again, why not let us in on the response you have received from the FAA? |
#9
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On Jan 26, 2:10*pm, Tom wrote:
As stated in the original message, I am still resolving issues with FAA legal. Caustic remarks aside, this is an issue with many pilots, and the issue is more than the words used in the current regulation. Tom Knauff What issue is there to resolve? Unless they contradicted 91.121(a)(1)(III) In the west, you cannot roll the altimeter down to zero, the knob does not adjust that far. And if you depart from an airfield at 1200MSL, and roll the altimeter to zero, you have to remember that you are reading 1200ft low, and when you climb through 16,800 as read on the altimeter, you just busted Class A ! We are under a Class B shelf, roll the altimeter down to zero, how do you know where your citing is as you climb under the shelf? BUSTED! T |
#10
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So once again, why not let us in on the response you have received
from the FAA? http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/...012/Knauff.pdf |
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