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Now let's take 91.175. The USA mandates the use of a published IAP.
The UK does not. 91.1 says p91 does not apply outside the USA. Does this mean one can fly an unpublished IAP in the UK? I don't see anything in 91.1 saying that it does not apply outside the US. It says that it does apply within the US: "(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section and §§91.701 and 91.703, this part prescribes rules governing the operation of aircraft (...) within the United States ..." and 91.703 then extends the compliance requirement outside the US "so far as it is not inconsistent with applicable regulations of the foreign country where the aircraft is operated or annex 2 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation...". So unless flying an IAP in the UK would somehow violate some UK rule, it sounds to me like a US-registered plane in the UK must comply with 91.175 and use a standard IAP. I take back what I just said. My copy of Jeppesen's "FARs Explained" cites an FAA Chief Counsel opinion in which a US-registered plane operating in Italy was not required to comply with 91.521 (shoulder harness) because Italian rules did not require this. Similar decision concerning fuel reserves, where 30 minutes (Italian rule) was acceptable in a situation that would have required 45 minutes by US FARs. So the FAA interpretation of "inconsistent" is apparently more lenient than my own interpretation. Hard to believe! I could not find this opinion online, the date is 2-16-1983. |
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On Feb 4, 4:40*pm, "Barry" wrote:
Now let's take 91.175. The USA mandates the use of a published IAP. The UK does not. 91.1 says p91 does not apply outside the USA. Does this mean one can fly an unpublished IAP in the UK? I don't see anything in 91.1 saying that it does not apply outside the US. It says that it does apply within the US: "(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section and §§91.701 and 91.703, this part prescribes rules governing the operation of aircraft (...) within the United States ..." and 91.703 then extends the compliance requirement outside the US "so far as it is not inconsistent with applicable regulations of the foreign country where the aircraft is operated or annex 2 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation...". So unless flying an IAP in the UK would somehow violate some UK rule, it sounds to me like a US-registered plane in the UK must comply with 91.175 and use a standard IAP. I take back what I just said. *My copy of Jeppesen's "FARs Explained" cites an FAA Chief Counsel opinion in which a US-registered plane operating in Italy was not required to comply with 91.521 (shoulder harness) because Italian rules did not require this. *Similar decision concerning fuel reserves, where 30 minutes (Italian rule) was acceptable in a situation that would have required 45 minutes by US FARs. *So the FAA interpretation of "inconsistent" is apparently more lenient than my own interpretation. *Hard to believe! I could not find this opinion online, the date is 2-16-1983.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'm surprised that a U.S. flag carrier, operating under a U.S. issued part 121 certificate is not held to U.S. 121 standards. A U.S. airline's ability to operate in foreign airspace is specifically based on its U.S. certificate (which is why carriers do not need to hold Air Carrier certificates with every country they fly into). -Robert |
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