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  #1  
Unread 03-01-10, 01:09 AM
Paul Sharp Paul Sharp is offline
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What if the aircraft is kept registered in the U.S.? Would that mean that the SIDs may not need to be complied with?
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  #2  
Unread 03-01-10, 10:05 AM
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Ernie Martin Ernie Martin is offline
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Paul, I don't know the answer to that (although I think not, or everyone would keep US registry to avoid SBs and SIDs), my point was solely one of cost. The cost of the SIDs is not in doing the "inspections", it's the disassembly/reassembly required to expose the areas needing inspection. And now that we know the cost of doing it safely, my gut tells me that those costs (plus crating and shipping) may well exceed the costs of ferrying the aircraft.

Ernie
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  #3  
Unread 03-01-10, 10:15 AM
Dave Underwood Dave Underwood is offline
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There are a couple of folks in Australia who do that ferry on a regular basis. I recall there was a recent article in AOPA about on fellow who did it a lot. The article was about doing it in a C182 and having the engine quit and his rescue.

There have been several earth rounders recently and they did have to ship in their own 100LL for the stretch between Turkey and China as I recall.

I have done the initial planning to fly around the Pacific and spend a bit of time touring Australia and New Zealand and it looks do-able if you add extra tanks in case you do have to tanker fuel.

The US to Australia routing is to Hawaii, Christmas Island, Samoa, Fiji etc. with the Leg to Hilo in Hawaii being 2,025 nm. That is a long time.

All those various places in teh Pacific likely have flying clubs so you could check availability of 100LL.

It would be a great trip.

Dave
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  #4  
Unread 03-02-10, 04:14 AM
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Skymaster337B Skymaster337B is offline
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Christmas Island is West of Australia, so I'm not sure the routing is Hawaii to Christmas Island. The problem is 100LL West of Hawaii...but plenty of H2O.

Personally, the safest way is Alaska, Russia, Japan, Philippines, Indonesia, Australia. But like I said before...you'll need to pay fees unimaginable in the Western world (and bribes too along the way)...and did I mention no 100LL in most of these places past Alaska. Sure there might be 100LL at a very few select places in Japan and the Philippines, but you'll need more than there are stops available.

To answer the question about the N number...the answer is you need an FAA annual to fly that aircraft anywhere in the world, under ICAO. For example, in the UK it is very expensive to own an airplane; so, about half of the general aviation fleet in the UK have N numbers instead of the UK's registration....then FAA registration rules apply, and is cheaper to maintain. I've seen it when I lived in the UK.
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  #5  
Unread 03-02-10, 06:29 AM
Dave Underwood Dave Underwood is offline
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A different Christmas Island, part of the Line Islands, north east of Australia. It is the first inhabited land with an airport south of Hawaii, just north of the equator. It is also called Kiritimati.

To comment on N-reg in Europe, there are more and more going on the N-reg, but the Europeans are trying to make that more difficult. On the G-reg (UK), even a minor change to anything costs about $5 k in fees and inspections as they seem to want to treat everything as major mod. All UK registered aircraft have to comply with the SID's and they treat a Service Bulletins like an AD and make many mandatory. No such thing as Part 91 and owner's discretion over here unless you are on the N-register.

Dave
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  #6  
Unread 03-02-10, 09:42 AM
Paul Sharp Paul Sharp is offline
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Is there any island between the west coast and Hawaii?

337B, for those "N" registered planes in the UK, would they be able to skip the SIDs then (assuming still Part 91 N registration)?
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  #7  
Unread 03-02-10, 11:37 AM
Dave Underwood Dave Underwood is offline
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No, just lots of water and about 2100 nm between the west coast and Hilo.

The N-reg in the UK follow the USA rules so if they are part 91, nothing is really mandatory.

Dave
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  #8  
Unread 03-02-10, 11:40 AM
Dave Underwood Dave Underwood is offline
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By memory, and as an additional thought, all the O-2's that went to S.E. Asia were flown over via Hawaii.
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