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Can someone simplify this answer for me me, please as it is nearing decision
time on my project? With no lights and or transponder, where will I not be able to fly? Thanks guys. |
#2
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On Sun, 11 Mar 2007 23:14:48 -0800, "Robert Loer" wrote:
Can someone simplify this answer for me me, please as it is nearing decision time on my project? With no lights and or transponder, where will I not be able to fly? In Class B or C airspace, or at night. If your plane has an engine-driven electrical system, you also will not be able to fly within the 30 nm Class B "Veil." Ron Wanttaja |
#3
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A little more specifically: Because of the lack of a transponder, you will
not be able to fly in class A, B or C airspace or within the lateral dimsensions of B&C airspace, Unable to fly over 10,000 feet MSL unless you are less than 2500 ft agl, not able to cross the ADIZ. In spite of all this if you make prior arrangements with the controllers in the B or C airspace, you can arrange to enter that space. (a) All airspace: U.S.-registered civil aircraft. For operations not conducted under part 121 or 135 of this chapter, ATC transponder equipment installed must meet the performance and environmental requirements of any class of TSO-C74b (Mode A) or any class of TSO-C74c (Mode A with altitude reporting capability) as appropriate, or the appropriate class of TSO-C112 (Mode S). (b) All airspace. Unless otherwise authorized or directed by ATC, no person may operate an aircraft in the airspace described in paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(5) of this section, unless that aircraft is equipped with an operable coded radar beacon transponder having either Mode 3/A 4096 code capability, replying to Mode 3/A interrogations with the code specified by ATC, or a Mode S capability, replying to Mode 3/A interrogations with the code specified by ATC and intermode and Mode S interrogations in accordance with the applicable provisions specified in TSO C-112, and that aircraft is equipped with automatic pressure altitude reporting equipment having a Mode C capability that automatically replies to Mode C interrogations by transmitting pressure altitude information in 100-foot increments. This requirement applies-- (1) All aircraft. In Class A, Class B, and Class C airspace areas; (2) All aircraft. In all airspace within 30 nautical miles of an airport listed in appendix D, section 1 of this part from the surface upward to 10,000 feet MSL; (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2) of this section, any aircraft which was not originally certificated with an engine-driven electrical system or which has not subsequently been certified with such a system installed, balloon or glider may conduct operations in the airspace within 30 nautical miles of an airport listed in appendix D, section 1 of this part provided such operations are conducted-- (i) Outside any Class A, Class B, or Class C airspace area; and (ii) Below the altitude of the ceiling of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport or 10,000 feet MSL, whichever is lower; and (4) All aircraft in all airspace above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport upward to 10,000 feet MSL; and (5) All aircraft except any aircraft which was not originally certificated with an engine-driven electrical system or which has not subsequently been certified with such a system installed, balloon, or glider---- (i) In all airspace of the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia at and above 10,000 feet MSL, excluding the airspace at and below 2,500 feet above the surface; and (ii) In the airspace from the surface to 10,000 feet MSL within a 10-nautical-mile radius of any airport listed in appendix D, section 2 of this part, excluding the airspace below 1,200 feet outside of the lateral boundaries of the surface area of the airspace designated for that airport. (c) Transponder-on operation. While in the airspace as specified in paragraph (b) of this section or in all controlled airspace, each person operating an aircraft equipped with an operable ATC transponder maintained in accordance with Sec. 91.413 of this part shall operate the transponder, including Mode C equipment if installed, and shall reply on the appropriate code or as assigned by ATC. (d) ATC authorized deviations. Requests for ATC authorized deviations must be made to the ATC facility having jurisdiction over the concerned airspace within the time periods specified as follows: (1) For operation of an aircraft with an operating transponder but without operating automatic pressure altitude reporting equipment having a Mode C capability, the request may be made at any time. (2) For operation of an aircraft with an inoperative transponder to the airport of ultimate destination, including any intermediate stops, or to proceed to a place where suitable repairs can be made or both, the request may be made at any time. (3) For operation of an aircraft that is not equipped with a transponder, the request must be made at least one hour before the proposed operation. "Ron Wanttaja" wrote in message ... On Sun, 11 Mar 2007 23:14:48 -0800, "Robert Loer" wrote: Can someone simplify this answer for me me, please as it is nearing decision time on my project? With no lights and or transponder, where will I not be able to fly? In Class B or C airspace, or at night. If your plane has an engine-driven electrical system, you also will not be able to fly within the 30 nm Class B "Veil." Ron Wanttaja |
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Technically....
You will be able to fly in Class B or C IF you get prior permission via telephone or possibly via radio if you have a handheld or panel mount. Flew my Corben (no lights, no generator, no transponder, Do have a handheld Nav/Com) into Springfield, IL Class C several years ago. Stopped about 45 minutes out, called them on the phone. They said go ahead and call on radio about 20 miles out. Did that, they told me to take a left turn for radar ident, about 1/2 second later they said radar confirmed, y'all c'mon in! They even routed a pair of Guard F-16s out around me as I got into the pattern ![]() As Ron says, if you have no engine driven generator, you can fly in the MODE C VEIL but outside of Class B airspace (under it) unless you have communicated with the owners of the airspace prior to entering it. No lights? No night flying. Scott Ron Wanttaja wrote: On Sun, 11 Mar 2007 23:14:48 -0800, "Robert Loer" wrote: Can someone simplify this answer for me me, please as it is nearing decision time on my project? With no lights and or transponder, where will I not be able to fly? In Class B or C airspace, or at night. If your plane has an engine-driven electrical system, you also will not be able to fly within the 30 nm Class B "Veil." Ron Wanttaja |
#5
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I fly a Luscombe 8A with no electrical system, thus of course without lights
or transponder. I must land before sundown, but other than that I have no problem. Without an engine driven electrical system, I'm legal to fly within the mode C veil, though I cannot enter B or C airspace without prior notice (1 hour). Having said that, I'd also say that being legal isn't necessarily being wise. There are reasons that transponders are ordinarily required in some areas. I stay out of the veil, avoid B airspace altogether and only enter C airspace rarely when there are no other suitable airports. Most controllers are fine with you entering C airspace, though some are real jerks. I was flying my daughter up to Savannah for a college visit last November. There were no other small GA airports in the area where I could pick up a rental car, and Hilton Head was a 45 minute drive. So, SAV it was. I called the tower a day or two in advance to let them know I was coming and asked if there were a particular time that I should avoid. The tower supervisor said that an arrival between 15:00 and 16:00 local was best. After stopping for fuel in Jacksonville, I called again (that's a least an hour out in a Luscombe!). Again, I received friendly and professional service. But, when I got closer to SAV and contacted approach, this guy was the rudest, most obnoxious SOB I'd ever dealt with. I literally had to quote him FAR chapter and verse, and even then he made it clear he wished I'd just go away. On the other hand, my wife and I flew into Columbus a couple of weeks ago, controllers couldn't have been friendlier or more helpful. On the whole, I enjoy flying the Luscombe. It's a real low-tech, low-stress, low-cost, fun-flying machine that draws an admiring and reminiscing crowd wherever it goes, and I rarely find the lack of transponder to be a serious drawback. Regards, Lee "Robert Loer" wrote in message ... Can someone simplify this answer for me me, please as it is nearing decision time on my project? With no lights and or transponder, where will I not be able to fly? Thanks guys. |
#6
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![]() "R. Lee Jarvis" wrote I fly a Luscombe 8A with no electrical system, thus of course without lights or transponder. I must land before sundown, but other than that I have no problem. On the whole, I enjoy flying the Luscombe. It's a real low-tech, low-stress, low-cost, fun-flying machine that draws an admiring and reminiscing crowd wherever it goes, and I rarely find the lack of transponder to be a serious drawback. Have you ever considered a small jell-cell lead-acid battery, and second hand transponder, along with you handheld radio, to make life easier when you want to go to the class C airports, or traverse their airspace? You would not have to use it all the time, but for those times you needed it, it could be worth the cost and weight, I would think. -- Jim in NC |
#7
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R. Lee Jarvis wrote:
I fly a Luscombe 8A with no electrical system, thus of course without lights or transponder. I must land before sundown, but other than that I have no problem. You may built from scratch a flywheel and drive a Kubota alternator. We have similar stuff with French and Brtish STC for A65 and latters engines: http://mdlaurent.free.fr/ I'm not sure Mr Sully understand english. It is'nt easy to copy the starter fittings but if you want only drive an alternator, it's realy easy to machine one pulley and built two alternator fittings. By -- Philippe Vessaire Ò¿Ó¬ |
#8
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Morgans wrote:
"R. Lee Jarvis" wrote I fly a Luscombe 8A with no electrical system, thus of course without lights or transponder. I must land before sundown, but other than that I have no problem. On the whole, I enjoy flying the Luscombe. It's a real low-tech, low-stress, low-cost, fun-flying machine that draws an admiring and reminiscing crowd wherever it goes, and I rarely find the lack of transponder to be a serious drawback. Have you ever considered a small jell-cell lead-acid battery, and second hand transponder, along with you handheld radio, to make life easier when you want to go to the class C airports, or traverse their airspace? You would not have to use it all the time, but for those times you needed it, it could be worth the cost and weight, I would think. I've never seen a hand held transponder since Terra went out of business. They used to make a balloon pack (essentially the TRT250 and a battery) as you suggest. I was never sure of the legality of this especially once you get to the point of needing mode C (which the Terra didn't address, mind you back in the day, unless you were very high or near one of the busier TCA's you didn't need mode C). |
#9
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![]() "Ron Natalie" wrote I've never seen a hand held transponder since Terra went out of business. They used to make a balloon pack (essentially the TRT250 and a battery) as you suggest. I was never sure of the legality of this especially once you get to the point of needing mode C (which the Terra didn't address, mind you back in the day, unless you were very high or near one of the busier TCA's you didn't need mode C). I doubt that it would be legal as mode C, unless it was a hard installation, and properly set up, blessed, pontified, and so forth. You could still go to the effort to get it approved; but nobody has to know that you are not going run it all of the time. -- Jim in NC |
#10
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message news ![]() "Ron Natalie" wrote I've never seen a hand held transponder since Terra went out of business. They used to make a balloon pack (essentially the TRT250 and a battery) as you suggest. I was never sure of the legality of this especially once you get to the point of needing mode C (which the Terra didn't address, mind you back in the day, unless you were very high or near one of the busier TCA's you didn't need mode C). I doubt that it would be legal as mode C, unless it was a hard installation, and properly set up, blessed, pontified, and so forth. You could still go to the effort to get it approved; but nobody has to know that you are not going run it all of the time. -- Yes, Terra did set up a transponder w/Mode C for a hot air balloon. It was done while I worked there in '95 or '96. It was done for the Abruzzo family who were attempting an altitude record. They needed a transponder (in addition to the recording altimeter) since they were going into Class A airspace. IIRC, they made it somewhere around 31K ft. The "system" was a ruggedized instrument case with the TRT250, a gel cell and the altitude encoder mounted inside. The case "mounted" on the edge of the basket just like the balloon's instruments. The only tricky part was the antenna. It was mounted on an aluminum ground plane that had stabilizing lines run about 3 feet back along the coax. Once the balloon was airborne, it was slung over the side of the basket and hung about 5 feet below the basket. The lines kept the ground plane approximately level. (There's no real problem with wind in a free balloon.) Gerry |
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