genna
Pattern Altitude
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ТУ-104
Thanks, but it's still unclear to me. Does circling the statue for sightseeing constitute a "local operation"? If so, is a transition to or from the fly-through SFRA altitudes permitted? The FAA course mentions transition through the SFRA on a clearance en route to Class B, but does not address entering the fly-through SFRA altitudes without a clearance, without intending to enter Class B.
This may confuse you even more: Note that this is RECOMENDATION(as in, I guess you can do it differently). They do not address how to do it northbound.
Recommended Procedures for Circling the Statue of Liberty
If you wish to circle the Statue of Liberty in an airplane, be aware that the airspace immediately surrounding the Statue presents a particular challenge. This is because:
- It is the most heavily trafficked sightseeing destination in the SFRA
- It is the southernmost turn-around point for all local helicopter tour routes
- Local helicopter tour operators fly an irregular pattern near it at approximately 500 feet MSL
- It is the area where many local helicopter tour operators receive ATC clearance to climb into the Class B airspace for the northbound leg of their tours
- Newark Airport's airspace west of the Statue starts above 500 feet MSL
- If you are entering the Hudson River Exclusion from the north, consider conducting the flight through the Exclusion as a transient operation (i.e., between 1,000 and up to, but not including, 1,300 feet MSL) past the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. Then re-enter the Exclusion at a lower altitude (i.e., as a local operation) to complete the circle of the Statue. This limits the amount of time you are operating in the local airspace.
- To complete the circle: o Do so at the highest practical altitude below 1,000 feet MSL
- Circle in a counter-clockwise direction