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TinmanJones
02-22-2018, 11:14 AM
FAA 103.15 Operations over congested areas.
No person may operate an ultralight vehicle over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over any open air assembly of persons.

Let me start by saying I’m new to Ultralight’s. Not new to flying, as I’ve been flying Cessna’s as part of obtaining my Private Pilots License.
I’ve read the FAA 103 rules & had a question about “congested areas”. What is their (the FAA) definition of a congested area of a city, town, or settlement?
My home airport is very close to our towns “Downtown” area. On Final you are flying right over downtown & over a neighborhood. The end of that runway is separated from a neighborhood street by a fence.
This airport houses our local EAA chapter & has had UL traffic now for over 40 years. So, I’m assuming our town isn’t a congested area or this would’ve already been an issue.
I’m just curious how you all view this 103.15 rule.
Thanks for any clarity.

Dana
02-22-2018, 11:45 AM
The short answer is it's whatever the FAA says it is.

It's not defined anywhere, the FAA has said it's defined on a "case by case" basis... i.e. if you annoy somebody.

If you avoid flying over towns, always fly high enough to glide to a landing in an area that's clearly not "congested", and you fly high enough that nobody on the ground will perceive you as a threat, you'll probably be fine.

For more detail, see http://www.footflyer.com/PPGBibleUpdates/Chapter08/congested.htm.

martymayes
02-22-2018, 12:01 PM
I’ve read the FAA 103 rules & had a question about “congested areas”. What is their (the FAA) definition of a congested area of a city, town, or settlement?

"We'll know it when we see it"


This airport houses our local EAA chapter & has had UL traffic now for over 40 years. So, I’m assuming our town isn’t a congested area or this would’ve already been an issue.

Don't assume. It may not be an issue because nobody has complained and the FAA hasn't come out to apply the "we'll know it when we see it" test.

FlyingRon
02-22-2018, 12:33 PM
My favorite is similar text in 91.319 that says "congested airway." I'm not sure what a congested airway is, other than perhaps the RIPON->OSH path over the railroad tracks and it wouldn't be so congested if they barred experimentals from it.

TinmanJones
02-22-2018, 01:03 PM
Ahh. I see.
So, as long as I’ve got plenty of altitude and flying straight & level when flying over town I should be fine.
Its when circling overhead, flying low, looking suspicious & disturbing others that it could be an issue. Correct?

Bill Berson
02-22-2018, 02:50 PM
It isn't defined, but was first used in 91.119. So reading 91.119 you can infer to avoid overflight of people depending on your maneuvering speed. (Helicopters have less minimums)

Most complaints are from people that read 91.119 and think 1000 feet is the law everywhere without reading the exceptions.
No altitude limit for 103. But the complainers don't know what is 103 or 91.
So avoid complainers completely.
91.119 allows takeoff and landing at your airport over downtown.

1600vw
02-22-2018, 03:12 PM
Now this could just be me, but I find Par 103 the most exciting flying over corn about 6 inches above said corn. I never did this, I always stayed at about 500' following my buddy flying his ultralight a few inches off the corn. But Par 103 is all about low slow flight. IMHO. Once you get up to say 1000' it is almost like you are sitting still. I find the fun lower down flying Par 103 and flying over open fields. The most fun, flying you can have. Again this could just be me. Also don't get me wrong, all flying is fun.

Dana
02-22-2018, 03:39 PM
Ahh. I see.
So, as long as I’ve got plenty of altitude and flying straight & level when flying over town I should be fine.
Its when circling overhead, flying low, looking suspicious & disturbing others that it could be an issue. Correct?

Yes and no. Technically, you aren't allowed to fly over town at all, as the town would be considered a congested area if somebody complains. Practically, with plenty of altitude it's unlikely anybody would complain.


91.119 allows takeoff and landing at your airport over downtown.

91.119 doesn't apply to ultralights operating under part 103. There is no exemption to the congested area prohibition, even for takeoff and landing. Again practically, it's ignored (again, until somebody complains).

Bill Berson
02-23-2018, 10:21 AM
It says "over any congested area of a city or town." That implies that some areas of a city are not congested and available. For example, a park or river or lake or even industrial area perhaps. It might be possible to fly out of Lake Union Seaplane base in downtown Seattle. I haven't checked. Probably would be limited to flight over the lake only. Because 103 doesn't allow enroute flight over a congested area at all. But the lake may not be congested since it is used for seaplanes.
I only mentioned 91.119 to explain his comment in post 1.

Could perhaps get prior permission for an area.

Tralika
02-26-2018, 09:26 AM
Some time ago I attended a seminar on this issue put on by an aviation attorney. As stated previously, Congested Area is not defined in the regs. The attorney cited a case in which the FAA violated a pilot operating under Part 91 for flying at low altitude over a congested area after he took off from an airport and did an early turn out. During the process the FAA agreed that the area the pilot flew over had an average of one house for every ten acres of land. The pilot appealed his violation to the NTSB arguing that the area was not congested. The NTSB upheld the violation. So, in absence of of a definition in the regs, you go to case law. Case law says that one house on ten acres is a congested area. If the FAA wants to violate you no this one your pretty much done.

TinmanJones
02-26-2018, 10:25 AM
Tralika, wow. That’s unbelievable. I guess we’re all subject in that sort of case. Crazy.

jedi
03-04-2018, 07:29 PM
FAA 103.15 Operations over congested areas.
No person may operate an ultralight vehicle over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over any open air assembly of persons.

Let me start by saying I’m new to Ultralight’s. Not new to flying, as I’ve been flying Cessna’s as part of obtaining my Private Pilots License.
I’ve read the FAA 103 rules & had a question about “congested areas”. What is their (the FAA) definition of a congested area of a city, town, or settlement?
My home airport is very close to our towns “Downtown” area. On Final you are flying right over downtown & over a neighborhood. The end of that runway is separated from a neighborhood street by a fence.
This airport houses our local EAA chapter & has had UL traffic now for over 40 years. So, I’m assuming our town isn’t a congested area or this would’ve already been an issue.
I’m just curious how you all view this 103.15 rule.
Thanks for any clarity.

First lets define UL as you use it. Confirm you are a legal FAR 103 operation. What other experimental aircraft do is no issue. You are not an experimental UL. There is no such thing you are either an experimental aircraft or an Ultralight Vehicle operating under CFR 14 - 103.

Congested area depends on the vehicle you are flying. You need to operate such that there is no undue hazard to persons or property on the surface. IF in a paraglider you can land in the back yard without knocking over the BBQ I maintain that you are OK. If you fly over the railroad (no train) or the power lines with a 100 foot wide right of way, it is not a congested area.

Reference post #9 - I have a photo of Lake Union that I say is congested for the typical floatplane. Doesn't mean I can't fly my UL over it cause I can ditch and stop in 50 feet. Multiple rescue boats would be another 50 feet away.

FlyingRon
03-05-2018, 05:19 PM
If the pilot's good, I mean if he's really sharp, he can barrel that thing in so low, oh it's a sight to see. You wouldn't expect it with a big ol' plane like a '52, but varrrooom! The jet exhaust frying chickens in the barnyard!

Tralika
03-07-2018, 08:23 AM
First lets define UL as you use it. Confirm you are a legal FAR 103 operation. What other experimental aircraft do is no issue. You are not an experimental UL. There is no such thing you are either an experimental aircraft or an Ultralight Vehicle operating under CFR 14 - 103.

Congested area depends on the vehicle you are flying. You need to operate such that there is no undue hazard to persons or property on the surface. IF in a paraglider you can land in the back yard without knocking over the BBQ I maintain that you are OK. If you fly over the railroad (no train) or the power lines with a 100 foot wide right of way, it is not a congested area.

Reference post #9 - I have a photo of Lake Union that I say is congested for the typical floatplane. Doesn't mean I can't fly my UL over it cause I can ditch and stop in 50 feet. Multiple rescue boats would be another 50 feet away.

Jedi,
Your definition of a congested area makes sense. Unfortunately that definition is not in the regs. That means the definition remains completely subjective. The FAA will decide what it means on a case by case basis which is not good news for pilots.

Bill Greenwood
03-12-2018, 08:33 PM
I think you all are missing something here. I dont have the exact words or the reference to them, but there is a part that says, "except as necessary for takeoff and landing" you cant fly low over certain areas. If not this clause, no one could land at the many airports that are right in towns, like Houston Hobby, Dallas Love and Addison, Montgomery Field,Oshkosh and hundreds more, in Chicago, L A, Miami.Denver. etc.

Dana
03-13-2018, 04:17 AM
I think you all are missing something here. I dont have the exact words or the reference to them, but there is a part that says, "except as necessary for takeoff and landing" you cant fly low over certain areas...

That's in Part 91, which doesn't apply to ultralights. There is no such wording in Part 103.

FlyingRon
03-18-2018, 03:58 PM
The NTSB upheld the violation. So, in absence of of a definition in the regs, you go to case law. Case law says that one house on ten acres is a congested area. If the FAA wants to violate you no this one your pretty much done.
What case law.

Actually, I think you misheard or the lawyer misspoke. I don't think there is any "case law" on congested airspace. What is true with regulations in general is that if the regulation needs interpretation, the ALJ an then the NTSB and even the district court must defer to the agency that wrote the regulation for the interpretation. Yes, it's a digusting miscarriage of the checks and balances of the Constitution but it's not limited to the FAA regulations.