cgrab
Pattern Altitude
A friend asked me to take some pictures of some property he plans to buy and offered to pay me. The fact that they were from the air is coincidental. Can I take his money?
In other words, your friend and you shared a common purpose in that both of you were wanting to look at the property from the air and he took pictures while the two of you did so and you want to know if he can offer his pro rata share and you will pay yours. Is that correct?
I don’t think his friend was with him in the airplane. Just selling the pictures he took himself while flying.
I don’t think his friend was with him in the airplane. Just selling the pictures he took himself while flying.
So is that legal?
So is that legal?
A friend asked me to take some pictures of some property he plans to buy and offered to pay me. The fact that they were from the air is coincidental. Can I take his money?
Although that really has no bearing in the position of OP (of whether or not it’s distracting). People do aerial photography as part of their job.I need an excuse to fly like the next person but flying and being distracted while taking photos might or might not end well. Don't want to read about you in the NTSB reports.
A friend asked me to take some pictures of some property he plans to buy and offered to pay me. The fact that they were from the air is coincidental. Can I take his money?
Wrong interpretation of this scenario. OP never mentioned that these photos are to be used for a business of any kind thus invalidating it for a commercial purpose. If the photos are to be used for personal pleasure (hang on his wall etc.,) than this is completely legal and I see nothing prohibiting what is being asked of by the friend. Again, the flying is not being used for a commercial purpose, it’s being used for personal use.The flying is not incidental to the business of aerial photography. The flying is inherently part of the business. A commercial rating is required.
https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/pic-archive/operations/aerial-photography
Wrong interpretation of this scenario. OP never mentioned that these photos are to be used for a business of any kind thus invalidating it for a commercial purpose. If the photos are to be used for personal pleasure (hang on his wall etc.,) than this is completely legal and I see nothing prohibiting what is being asked of by the friend. Again, the flying is not being used for a commercial purpose, it’s being used for personal use.
To the extent that your operation would be in furtherance of your own business of aerial photography or survey, and you are not carrying persons or property for compensation or hire, then you may do so holding a private pilot certificate. However, to the extent that your operation would involve operating your aircraft as an aerial platform for other photographers, etc., for compensation or hire, you would need to be the holder of at least a commercial pilot certificate in order to act as the pilot.
Let's say I, a private pilot who views photography (and aviation) as a hobby, go up in my plane and take some photos (for fun). I post the results online (lets say on Flickr) and someone offers me money to buy one of the photos. Can I sell the photo?
Thanks tlglenn, I'll give him the photos at lunch and not bring my wallet.
The 1995 interpretation no longer seems to be the controlling interpretation. See the 2010 Perry interpretation: https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/agc/practice_areas/regulations/interpretations/data/interps/2010/perry - (2010) legal interpretation.pdf
Hmmm...a reversal. I didn't see this when I looked, thanks for catching it.
I'm not sure what the carve out for aerial photography in the regs means then.
I'm not sure what the carve out for aerial photography in the regs means then.
A friend asked me to take some pictures of some property he plans to buy and offered to pay me. The fact that they were from the air is coincidental. Can I take his money?