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Jim59
1st Jul 2016, 22:12
The CAA having reminded us that Part NCO takes effect in the UK on 25th August prompted me to have a look. It seems to me that it makes ELTs mandatory in EASA light aircraft from that date. please tell me I'm wrong, but I cannot find a relevant derogation.

The existing CAA exemption will, I believe, only apply to Annex II aeroplanes after that date.

dublinpilot
2nd Jul 2016, 09:36
From memory, you need to look at the "Acceptable Means of Compliance" which allows a PLB be used instead.

Jim59
2nd Jul 2016, 09:53
I'm not sure how to read the regulation for aircraft older than July 2008 - it seems to say they must have an ELT but later aircraft have the option of a PLB. If they had put an "or" at the end of bullet 1 it would have been clear.

The AMCs and GM don't expand the options - just more practical detail on things like when to change batteries.

Either way they cost money whereas until now there has been an exemption for non-commercial.

NCO.IDE.A.170 Emergency locator transmitter (ELT)
(a) Aeroplanes shall be equipped with:
(1) an ELT of any type, when first issued with an individual CofA on or before 1 July 2008;
(2) an automatic ELT, when first issued with an individual CofA after 1 July 2008; or
(3) a survival ELT (ELT(S)) or a personal locator beacon (PLB), carried by a crew member or a passenger, when certified for a maximum passenger seating configuration of six or less.
(b) ELTs of any type and PLBs shall be capable of transmitting simultaneously on 121,5 MHz and 406 MHz.

bookworm
2nd Jul 2016, 16:36
A; B; or C is intended to be read as A or B or C.

But indeed you will have to spend money on a PLB, with questionable return in safety value.

GipsyMagpie
5th Jul 2016, 20:06
And a fire extinguisher and a first aid kit

md 600 driver
5th Jul 2016, 20:12
Hi
is private use classified as non commercial ops (NCO) ?

DeltaV
6th Jul 2016, 07:09
A German once told me of a French saying, made with a typical Gallic shrug, "Hnnn, Paris is so far away".

Jan Olieslagers
6th Jul 2016, 14:01
I hear rumours that certain countries might well continue to insist on a "real" ELT, permanently fixed in the plane - Holland comes to mind.

MrAverage
7th Jul 2016, 08:13
Bloggs to CFI:


"Alright to go and do one circuit boss?"


Boss:


"Sure, but don't forget your PLB!"

trevs99uk
7th Jul 2016, 11:05
Ref Holland and ELT..

I read on another forum that as Holland would need to file a difference to EASA
NCO.IDE.A.170 Emergency locator transmitter (ELT) requirements.
Which they have not yet done.
Then they cannot stop you from have an PLB over an ELT.

The Ancient Geek
7th Jul 2016, 12:53
Why do you refer to The Netherlands as Holland ?
Holland is a district within The Netherlands, a bit like an english county, so would you refer to the UK as Surrey ?

bookworm
7th Jul 2016, 14:23
Ref Holland and ELT..

I read on another forum that as Holland would need to file a difference to EASA
NCO.IDE.A.170 Emergency locator transmitter (ELT) requirements.
Which they have not yet done.
Then they cannot stop you from have an PLB over an ELT.

A state can file a difference from ICAO SARPs. It cannot "file a difference" from an EU regulation. A state that persists in applying different regulation will eventually find itself the subject of infringement proceedings by the Commission.

MrAverage
8th Jul 2016, 13:38
Re:NCO.IDE.A.170

My interpretation of this section is; that the operator is responsible for equipping the aircraft with a PLB (in our particular case) but the PIC is responsible for carrying it or having a passenger do so.
This is important to our club as we use various aircraft, some of which we are not the operator.


How do other forumites read that section?

Jan Olieslagers
8th Jul 2016, 13:48
Why do you refer to The Netherlands as Holland ?

1) because the Dutch do so themselves - only yesterday I drove behind a lorry showing it was from "Kerkrade, Holland"*. Or, if you can tolerate the noise, watch a match by their national teams of football or ice-skating or whatever and note the cries of "Hup Holland"

2) because the English generally seem to like vague postings, some even priding themselves in their ability of working it out just the same.

Holland is a district within The Netherlands
That's perhaps correct historically - I think Holland was a county - "graafschap" at one time - but today there's only the provinces of Zuid-Holland and Noord-Holland.

* Kerkrade being actually in Limburg - a term even much more profuse than Holland - but surely Kerkrade is not in Holland (properly spoken) and never has been.

ChickenHouse
13th Jul 2016, 08:07
ELT were mandatory for all aircraft in their airspace in certain EASA countries for quite some years now, so question: is there really still a noticeable number of aircraft without?

MrAverage
13th Jul 2016, 10:45
Thousands in the UK.

Jan Olieslagers
13th Jul 2016, 13:02
... and a few more on the continent :)

DeltaV
15th Jul 2016, 07:35
I'm confused.

If I go to the CAA website and search for "Part NCO" the top hit is Part NCO | Commercial industry, which seems to me to cover what is being discussed in this thread, ie. not applicable to Private Flying.
Second hit is "Application regulations | General aviation" which linked page makes no mention that I can see of these requirements.

So what is the concern about all this in relation to private flying?

MrAverage
15th Jul 2016, 09:39
This is the document:


https://www.easa.europa.eu/system/files/dfu/Part-NCO%20IR.pdf


Amongst others, pages 9, 10, 19 and 30 are relevant to private flying.

MrAverage
15th Jul 2016, 09:40
The search engine on the new CAA site doesn't appear to be any better than that on the old site..............

DeltaV
15th Jul 2016, 19:10
This is the document:


https://www.easa.europa.eu/system/files/dfu/Part-NCO%20IR.pdf


Amongst others, pages 9, 10, 19 and 30 are relevant to private flying.
What a load of bureaucratic bollox!
I understand that its implementation has been delayed as long as possible but was there a consultation on this and was it publicised? And as usual the faceless bureaucrats are good at spending our money for stuff we may never need.

GipsyMagpie
16th Jul 2016, 07:15
That link is to the draft of the main regulation. What you really want is the consolidated version which includes all the updates, guidance material and acceptable means of compliance in one place.

Take a look at the main page (https://www.easa.europa.eu/regulations). Then look under the drop down list under Air Operations for "Easy Access rules". There is something similar for the aircrew regulation. Here is the link (https://www.easa.europa.eu/system/files/dfu/Air%20Ops%20IR%2C%20AMC%2C%20GM_4th%20Edition_May%202016.pdf ) but it will be broken as soon as they update it.

Whopity
16th Jul 2016, 08:55
What a load of bureaucratic bollox!Welcome to the EU, and your side of the border is all for keeping it!