Excellent turn-out of participants, some moments can be seen here below.
Join your community
Join a community to be part of the discussion.
AOPA Finland created an event in General Aviation
Michel MASSON posted in Rotorcraft
VAST Rotorcraft Safety Technology survey, June 2022
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/VAST2022
You are kindly invited to take and promote through your professional networks and on social media this Rotorcraft Safety Technology survey developed by the Vertical Aviation Safety Team (VAST) WG Technology, chaired by Mike Hirschberg, Executive Director, Vertical Flight Society (VFS).
Many thanks for your contribution!
Peter Holt commented on Peter Holt's topic in General Aviation
Actually I was wrong. This has NOT been sorted, and the Cyprus CAA has started doing the same thing as the Irish one.
Mohamed Fahmy posted in Air Operations
Leonid Antonov commented on Jannes Neumann's topic in General Aviation
CS-STAN issue 4 includes in Standard Change CS-SC403b,
PROVISIONS FOR THE INSTALLATION OF LIGHTWEIGHT CAMERAS. And this Standard Change has refernse to documents for apply - CAA UK CAP136937, Camera Mounts Guide. But tyis CAP has been has been withdrawn from 10.05.2022.
Could I use CS-SC105a instead CAP136937? (it is recomendation of CAA UK)
Borja GARCIA-BLANCO CASTRO created an event in Cybersecurity
Michel MASSON posted in Rotorcraft
VFS World eVTOL Aircraft Directory and SGS Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) Indexes: Get it all in a few clicks!
https://evtol.news/aircraft
VFS have categorised all known electric and hybrid-electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) concepts in the World eVTOL Aircraft Directory. First started in 2016, it now catalogues 650+ aircraft.
https://aamrealityindex.com/
SGS Consulting have developed two indexes:
- The AAM Reality Index, tracking the likelihood of an OEM certifying their aircraft, entering service and producing it in thousand of units per year;
- The AAM Infrastructure Readiness Index, tracking the readiness of the infrastructure that will house the vehicles' operations.
Useful instruments?
Leave your comment below.
Jordi Vives Talló commented on Martijn Kort's topic in General Aviation
Since the fields are listed in an AMC, these are not mandatory. Moreover, most of the logbooks have an open field for comments, notes, etc that may embody any necessary information.
Bear also in mind that in many countries (UK, Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden etc) the aircraft logbook is issued/sold by the CAA. So I think it's not a topic for manufacturers.
Martijn Kort created a topic in General Aviation
FERNANDO RAMOS commented on a post in Air Operations
The re-use of defuelled fuel. Does anyone knows any existent EASA Rule?
Goncalo Thank you very much for the info.
FERNANDO RAMOS posted in Air Operations
The re-use of defuelled fuel. Does anyone knows any existent EASA Rule?
djanibodlovic created a topic in General Aviation
John FRANKLIN created a topic in General Aviation
Ivan Kuznetsov posted in General Aviation
Dear EASA General Aviation community,
I am writing on behalf of a group of private pilots, student pilots and general aviation enthusiasts with Russian citizenship who reside in the European Union.
We are all affected by the EU Regulation 2022/334 (Article 3d) that was clearly intended to make flights and maintenance of commercial aircrafts operated by Russian aircarriers and private jets of Russian oligarchs impossible in the European Union:
“ It shall be prohibited for any aircraft operated by Russian air carriers, including as a marketing carrier in code-sharing or blocked-space arrangements, or for any Russian registered aircraft, or for any non-Russian-registered aircraft which is owned or chartered, or otherwise controlled by any Russian natural or legal person, entity or body, to land in, take off from or overfly the territory of the Union.”
The objectives of the restrictive measures against Russia are declared as follows:
1) weaken the Kremlin’s ability to finance the war;
2) impose clear economic and political costs on Russia’s political elite responsible for the invasion.
According to the current interpretation EASA stated in the corresponding FAQ, the ban concerns all kinds of motorized aircrafts (E-Class, Ultralights) as well as gliders and even drones. It prohibits all kinds of flying activities, including recreational flying, makes no distinction between a small two-seater airplane and a luxurious business jet and also does not differentiate between legal residents of the European Union and residents of Russian Federation.
We condemn the war. We are not oligarchs financing the war. We do not have any influence on the Kremlin’s politics. We are ordinary men and women legally residing in the EU. We believe that a legal EU resident's ability to fly an aircraft for recreational purposes within the EU territory is consistent with the objectives of the restrictive measures. We also believe this Regulation in its current interpretation has clear signs of discrimination solely on the basis of nationality.
In regard to the aforementioned we ask EASA:
1) To review the wording of the FAQ with the goal to explicitly exclude all general aviation pilots (including student pilots) who are Russian nationals legally residing in the EU and are not subject to personal sanctions from the restrictions, as stated in Article 3d:
“The competent authorities may authorize an aircraft to land in, take off from, or overfly, the territory of the Union if the competent authorities have determined that such landing, take-off or overflight is required for [...] any other purpose consistent with the objectives of this Regulation.”
2) To help us, as the most relevant Agency, to convey the feedback to the European Council and European Commission in order to amend the EU Regulation 2022/334 with the same goal as stated in 1.
Sincerely,
Ivan Kuznetsov
Nazariy Harvat Shchesniy commented on a post in Air Operations
Dear colleagues,
I would like to ask some questions regarding the new training for Flight Operations Officers established in the AIR OPS. Hope you can assist me.
As part of the Regulation 2021/1296 and the corresponding Decision 2022/005/R, applicable from October, a new training is defined for FOOs/FDs in AMC1 ORO.GEN.110(c)&(e) Operator responsibilities.
IATA defines, in addition to the term FOO, the term FOA, which refers to "A suitably qualified person or specialist designated by an Operator with specific responsibilities relevant to the control and supervision of flight operations who supports, briefs and/or assists the FOO and/or pilot-incommand." However, this definition does not exist in the AIR OPS regulation.
Therefore, my questions are:
- Does the personnel considered as FOA for an IOSA operator fall into the FOO definition when referring to the AIR OPS?
- Is the training established in the above mentioned AMC applicable to a FOA?
Thank you in advance for your help.
Best regards,
Nazariy
Hello everyone,
Thank you very much for your inputs about this topic.
For your info, we have received some guidance from the Spanish NAA and they clarified this by stating the following:
"If the implicit definition of tasks for a FOA corresponds to those of a FD/FOO, ORO.GEN.110(c) would apply to them since they do not require a license and would require specific operator training."
According to this interpretation, in the case of our operator the AIR OPS FOO/FD training IS APPLICABLE for the FOAs, as the above mentioned condition is met.
Best regards,
Nazariy
Zsofia BEHNKE posted in General Aviation
As a result of the work undertaken under RMT.0476, EASA is pleased to announce the publication of NPA 2022-04 on 25 May 2022, proposing amendments for a comprehensive update of the SERA IR (Regulation 923/2012) and of the related AMC and GM.
The proposals issued with this NPA:
• ensure synchronisation between the SERA regulatory framework and the originating transposed International Civil Aviation Organizaton (ICAO) provisions, especially those of ICAO Doc 4444 ‘PANS-ATM’ up to its Amendment 9, in particular in relation to new procedures on standard instrument departures (SID) and standard instrument arrivals (STAR) and other provisions identified as being of a ‘rules-of-the-air’ nature;
• introduce changes to the existing radio communication failure procedure in anticipation of a future amendment to ICAO Annex 2, thus bringing forward in time the related operational benefits;
• remove the Supplement to the Annex to the SERA IR, containing the commonly agreed differences to ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs), and introduce regulatory references to Regulation (EU) 2018/1139 on the notification of differences;
• introduce speed restrictions to prevent supersonic flights over the territory of the EU, with the objective of protecting citizens from unacceptable sonic booms generated by supersonic transport (SST) aircraft, in order to maintain a high level of environmental protection;
• address issues in the implementation of the SERA IR as either identified by EASA through its standardisation activities or raised by stakeholders;
• satisfy a safety recommendation addressed to EASA, related to the inclusion of information on ballistic parachutes on board in the flight plan; and
• remove editorial mistakes and identified consistency issues.
This NPA is available at the following link of the EASA public website: NPA 2022-04 - Regular update of the SERA regulatory framework (IRs and AMC & GM) | EASA (europa.eu); comments may be submitted until 25 August 2022 through the Comment Response Tool (CRT) at http://hub.easa.europa.eu/crt/.
John FRANKLIN created a topic in General Aviation
Christoph Schnyder commented on Borja GARCIA-BLANCO CASTRO's topic in Cybersecurity
EUROCAE has also published the Panel 4 recording on YouTube
You'll find the link in the attached text file.
Michel MASSON created a topic in Rotorcraft