cosy Geschrieben 1. Juli Geschrieben 1. Juli Hat jemand bessere Übersicht über die durch die EU-Verordnung 2024/404 eingeführte und teils (je nach Land) seit einem Monat gültigen Änderungen? Was ändert bez. SVFR? werden neue Meteodienste eingeführt ? usw.. ..sollten einige Begriffsbestimmungen in Bezug auf Wetterbedingungen sowie einige Bestimmungen in Bezug auf Flugverkehrskontrolldienste, z. B. Freigaben im Zusammenhang mit Sonderflügen nach Sichtflugregeln (Special Visual Flight Rules, VFR), Maßnahmen, die im Falle einer Abweichung vom aktuellen Flugplan zu ergreifen sind, verkürzte Positionsmeldungen, Wettermeldungen sowie bestimmte Sprechfunk- und Sprechgruppenanforderungen wie die Angabe der Wirbelschleppenkategorie, die Verwendung von Datalink-Systemen in der Wetterkommunikation und die Freigabe für Standard-Instrumentenabflug- und -anflugstrecken geändert werden. Darüber hinaus sollte ein umfassendes Verfahren für den Ausfall der Funkkommunikation eingeführt werden. Cosy Zitieren
ArminZ Geschrieben 1. Juli Geschrieben 1. Juli (bearbeitet) 21 minutes ago, cosy said: Was ändert bez. SVFR? werden neue Meteodienste eingeführt ? usw.. Schau Dir einfach das ganze Dokument in Ruhe an. Wird ja alles aufgelistet was ändert. Für den Normalo-GA-Piloten nichts wirklich dramatisches. Bezgl. SVFR Seite 5/30: kleine Ergänzungen zu SERA 5005 und 5010 Bearbeitet 1. Juli von ArminZ Zitieren
cosy Geschrieben 1. Juli Autor Geschrieben 1. Juli vor 5 Minuten schrieb ArminZ: Schau Dir einfach das ganze Dokument in Ruhe an. Wird ja alles aufgelistet was ändert. Für den Normalo-GA-Piloten nichts wirklich dramatisches. Bezgl. SVFR Seite 5/30: SERA 5005 und 5010 Habs mit Brechreitzgefühlen durchgelesen (versucht). Die EU-Juristen bringen es fertig, ihre Texte so zu formulieren, dass man dabei gleich schnarchend einschläft oder ein Trauma kriegt. Wenn's verständlich (oder anders gesagt klar) wäre, hätt ich die Frage nicht gestellt. Vielleicht weisse eine / einer der Profis hier was. Seit man keine Blätter mehr im AIP einsortieren /ersetzten muss, weiss das gemeine Flugvolk ja kaum mehr wo das neue Zeugs auftaucht (ironisch gemeint)- aber wer liest denn schon nach dem Nachtessen AIP- Schinken? Cosy Zitieren
ArminZ Geschrieben 1. Juli Geschrieben 1. Juli (bearbeitet) https://www.easa.europa.eu/community/topics/changes-sera Quote Operational Focus Areas 1. Position Uncertainty on the Manoeuvring Area (SERA.3212) Clearer procedures if an aircraft is uncertain of its position while taxiing, pilots must immediately notify ATC. 2. Visual Flight Rules (SERA.5005) and Special VFR (SERA.5010) In these two points of SERA the requirements on special VFR and their flights in control zones are corrected. 3. Flight Plan Contents (SERA.4005) Additional requirement on including the information on ballistic parachute recovery system in the filed flight plans, following safety recommendations after a 2016 accident (RANS S6, EC-YDQ). 4. Air Traffic Control Clearances (SERA.8015) Additional requirements on flights partially subject to air traffic control clearances and read back of clearances by radio-equipped vehicle drivers. 5. Adherence to Current Flight Plan (SERA.8020) Enhanced requirements on deviations from the current flight plan and intended changes the Mach number or true airspeed. 6. Radio Communication Failure (RCF) Procedures (SERA.8035 and 14083) There are clear new requirements for what both flight crews and ATC units must do when communication fails in the airspace regulated by SERA: The requirements detailed in SERA collected and organised the presently applicable ICAO radio communication failure procedures described in Annexes 2 and 10 Volume II, and PANS-ATM grouping the actions to address flight crews and air traffic controllers with two differences. The first difference is that IFR flights are required to set Mode A Code 7601 to inform the air traffic services unit about their intention to continue to fly in visual meteorological conditions and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome. The other difference is that there is a common time parameter of 20 minutes for both procedural and surveillance environment to be observed before adapting the speed and vertical profile in accordance with the filed flight plan, as amended by the modification and delay messages. Flight Crew Actions: Set Mode A Code 7600 immediately to indicate radio failure. VFR Flights: Fly in VMC conditions. Land at the nearest suitable aerodrome. Report arrival to the appropriate authority as soon as possible. IFR Flights: Maintain the last assigned speed and level for 20 minutes after squawking 7600 if failure occurs outside controlled airspace. Then proceed according to the filed flight plan. If no limit points specified, rejoin the flight plan route at the next significant point. Hold over the destination aerodrome, commence descent close to the ETA, perform the published instrument approach procedure, and land within 30 minutes after ETA. Landing in VMC: If visual conditions are met, the crew must land as soon as possible. In this case, set Mode A Code 7601 (VMC with communication failure). ATC Actions: Service Based on Expected Procedures:ATC must provide services assuming the aircraft will follow the standard radio failure procedures based on their filed flight plan and operational expectations. Notify Other ATC Units:The ATC unit must immediately inform adjacent ATC units about the aircraft with lost communication and gather information about alternate aerodromes where the aircraft could divert. Re-established Communication:If communication with the aircraft is re-established, ATC must promptly inform the previous ATC units about the new status. Use of Visual Signals:Aircraft and ATC must revert to visual signals as specified in Appendix 1 if necessary to support safe handling on the ground or in controlled airspace. Why This Matters Radio communication failures are rare, but when they happen, every second counts.Clear, structured responses — by both crews and controllers — prevent unnecessary diversions, unsafe assumptions, and secondary emergencies. Operational teams must ensure: Flight crews practice RCF scenarios in training. Dispatch and OCC teams understand the new flow of notifications. ATC liaisons are ready to coordinate information rapidly across units. 7. Wake Turbulence (SERA.14090) Specific communication procedures (SERA.14090) related to the wake turbulence category, weather deviation and clearances on standard instrument departure and standard instrument arrival. The latter has a significant effect on the phraseology to unambiguously indicate the constraints, where applicable. 8. Automatic Terminal Information Service (SERA.9010) Updated ATIS procedures, reflecting the requirements on the reporting runway surface conditions. 9. On-board Aircraft Identification Setting (SERA.13015) Clear obligations on aircraft operators for correct transponder code and ADS-B settings during flights. There is also the allowance to use of an additional specific call sign, if approved by the competent authority based on the requirements provided as means of compliance. The requirements in this point are applicable to both Mode S and ADS-B transmitters. Public Health Focus (SERA.14100) New Definition and Notification Procedures for Communicable Diseases: If a communicable disease is suspected on board, flight crews must report using specific phrases and follow national public health protocols. Supports faster handover to medical authorities on arrival. Appendices Appendix 1 (Signals) and Appendix 5 (Aircraft Observations) updated to reflect new ICAO standards. Bearbeitet 1. Juli von ArminZ Zitieren
FalconJockey Geschrieben 2. Juli Geschrieben 2. Juli Das hatten wir doch gerade erst diskutiert: Zitat 3. Flight Plan Contents (SERA.4005) Additional requirement on including the information on ballistic parachute recovery system in the filed flight plans, following safety recommendations after a 2016 accident (RANS S6, EC-YDQ). 1 Zitieren
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