EdFred
Taxi to Parking
But you'd have a high likelyhood of crashing since you can't file a flight plan.
Sure ya can, "Accidentally" transpose numbers when you file.
But you'd have a high likelyhood of crashing since you can't file a flight plan.
Sure ya can, "Accidentally" transpose numbers when you file.
I think he needs a ferry permit. Can a couple dozen more people confirm?
Am I the only one that would just fly the damn thing?
What flight................................
Two of us with common sense. It was delayed due to weather, close enough for government work.
Unless the FSDO is open on the day I need to fly the plane...... What flight? 19 miles?
Am I the only one that would just fly the damn thing?
Yep, its in Colorado but covered by SLC. I will be calling them first thing in the morning.
Why would i take any chance with insurance validity when i can get a piece of paper in 15 mins that eliminates any doubt ?Am I the only one that would just fly the damn thing?
Two of us with common sense. It was delayed due to weather, close enough for government work.
Unless the FSDO is open on the day I need to fly the plane...... What flight? 19 miles?
While in training, I was informed by my instructor that an airplane that is out of inspection but was in regular use was allowed to be flown one flight from the current location to the airport where the mechanic was located so that the inspection could be completed.
Anyone know if this is the case? I know the FAA has a Ferry Request that I can apply for, I have already sent an email to the Salt Lake FSDO about it, but I am wondering if my former instructor was full of it.
You're the only one to admit to it on a searchable forum.
Am I the only one that would just fly the damn thing?
If the airplane is not insured, not in very nice shape I might fly it. But.....if it's insured, worth some bucks and I realize I had plenty of time to fly it there instead of waiting until the last minute , I'd get a ferry permit. This is exactly what I did. Called the local office, explained where I was and wanted to go , he faxed permit to the destination airport that day. No big deal.
Am I the only one that would just fly the damn thing?
If the airplane is not insured, not in very nice shape I might fly it. But.....if it's insured, worth some bucks and I realize I had plenty of time to fly it there instead of waiting until the last minute , I'd get a ferry permit. This is exactly what I did. Called the local office, explained where I was and wanted to go , he faxed permit to the destination airport that day. No big deal.
I didn't say that. It wasn't me, Henning made me do it.
Seems like faxing it to the destination airport would be kind of useless....
My thoughts exactly......
You dangerous scofflaw, you.
But the Chief Council says your left arm will turn evil and there's plenty of case law to support it.
It's a club plane, he'll need to get a ferry permit to keep the powers that be happy.
We know you would NEVER let your aircraft be out of annual though, so it's a moot point.
They fax it to the number the requester gives them. If the mechanic happens to have an office at the destination airport one would assume that's where he would want it faxed to.
I am one of the "powers that be" as the assistant manager.
Actually, I did call the FSDO in SLC on Friday, and had a ferry permit in my inbox about 30 minutes later.
To be honest, I probably would have just flown it if it was going to take a long time, but I guess it's better to be legal...
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Thank you.
You would never get anything from the local FSDO in 30. Trust me. They are anti GA, and HATE experimentals.
Denver?
We know you would NEVER let your aircraft be out of annual though, so it's a moot point.
You are correct sir.
Well, since your airplane technically doesn't NEED an annual . . .
The Denver FSDO have trouble doing things in 30 mins also? Damn! Inefficiency must be contagious!
We had zero problem getting a ferry permit from Denver a few years ago when weather stopped our cross-town flight to drop the airplane off for inspection on the originally intended day and everyone got tied up doing other things for another week.
Can't really say if it was in 30 minutes, since we had no need to rush, but it wasn't slow either.
Haven't really run into any "anti-GA"sentiment out of Denver either. Not sure what that's about.
Good, Denver FSDO actually supports GA and works with pilots and aircraft owners. The Lincoln FSDO, not so much!