skippydiesel Posted Friday at 03:10 AM Author Posted Friday at 03:10 AM 3 hours ago, onetrack said: But there ARE restrictions on certain areas of airspace you are NOT allowed to transit, are there not? Military airspace, tall buildings airspace, certain areas deemed by councils to be "no-fly areas"? Skippy, I think you're simplifying a principle that is nuanced, depending on who has obtained, and where they have applied, controls over certain areas of airspace. Already covered those in earlier post. Just making the point, no private owner can own/control the airspace above their property😈
turboplanner Posted Friday at 04:45 AM Posted Friday at 04:45 AM Before talking about these things and going off the rails, better to get the legislation for your State and see what it says. There are plenty of Tribunal cases for precedents in Planning and building etc. 2
spacesailor Posted Friday at 07:15 AM Posted Friday at 07:15 AM I have often been advised , " to fly 10-1103 on private land " . Most agree ' it should be land owned by me . ( on paper ) to be legal . Three ' property owners ' have offered land, for flying the Hummel-Bird . spacesailor
skippydiesel Posted Friday at 07:17 AM Author Posted Friday at 07:17 AM 2 hours ago, turboplanner said: Before talking about these things and going off the rails, better to get the legislation for your State and see what it says. There are plenty of Tribunal cases for precedents in Planning and building etc. Aviation is a Federal matter. I doubt that State law, has jurisdiction at an "level" when it comes to air navigation & the authority of the PIC . Australian Air law (CASA) is a combination of Federal and International air law, with a strong trend towards International, for the simple very common sense aim, of standardisation, to facilitate flights between countries.😈
turboplanner Posted Friday at 11:43 AM Posted Friday at 11:43 AM Your problem Skippy is that you still haven't produced ANY laws. That would be a start. Then there is the matter of what is being discussed which is payment for using the property, which hasn't been addressed. Then there is the morality where the low lifes that cheat their way out of paying spoil it for the genuine users, and when costs aren't covered, it's an easy decision for an owner/council to find something that returns a profit like building houses or factories on the site. 1
skippydiesel Posted Friday at 10:23 PM Author Posted Friday at 10:23 PM My problem??? You jest. Your problem, friend, is introducing, 1. the unlikly jurisdiction of a State and 2. the following that up with a vague statement to do with use of property, when this thread is about the air above😈
turboplanner Posted Friday at 10:38 PM Posted Friday at 10:38 PM 7 minutes ago, skippydiesel said: My problem??? You jest. Your problem, friend, is introducing, 1. the unlikly jurisdiction of a State and 2. the following that up with a vague statement to do with use of property, when this thread is about the air above😈 The air above is regularly decided by our State Tribunals so there are precedents under the relevant Acts, and they are searchable here: https://www.austlii.edu.au/databases.html From that link go to the relevant Tribunal and you'll find the case decisions which set the precedents. 1
skippydiesel Posted Saturday at 09:58 PM Author Posted Saturday at 09:58 PM 23 hours ago, turboplanner said: The air above is regularly decided by our State Tribunals so there are precedents under the relevant Acts, and they are searchable here: https://www.austlii.edu.au/databases.html From that link go to the relevant Tribunal and you'll find the case decisions which set the precedents. Turbs me old mate - You send me a link with possibly thousands of references within (all Sates, Islands, even NZ) - There is no way I will plough through it, to help you make your mythical point - Narrow the reference😈 1
BrendAn Posted yesterday at 11:50 AM Posted yesterday at 11:50 AM On 05/04/2025 at 9:38 AM, turboplanner said: The air above is regularly decided by our State Tribunals so there are precedents under the relevant Acts, and they are searchable here: https://www.austlii.edu.au/databases.html From that link go to the relevant Tribunal and you'll find the case decisions which set the precedents. so you would be happy to pay a fee for flying over an airfield at 9500 ft.
turboplanner Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 5 hours ago, BrendAn said: so you would be happy to pay a fee for flying over an airfield at 9500 ft. I already said I flight plan around restrictions like that; it's usually only a degree or so for a while and then back to track - usually zero difference in flight time. There are plenty of places you can't go at all. No point crying about it, just navigate to avoid them.
BurnieM Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) We are now going off at tangents. The law is not clear on whether you 'own' the airspace above your property. It allows for you to use it but in many cases also allows shared use by non-owners. Is it reasonable to try to charge for airspace at a significant height above the owners actual use ? Probably not, unless your objective is simply to repel others. Can we leave it here ? Edited 15 hours ago by BurnieM 1
skippydiesel Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago 4 hours ago, turboplanner said: I already said I flight plan around restrictions like that; it's usually only a degree or so for a while and then back to track - usually zero difference in flight time. There are plenty of places you can't go at all. No point crying about it, just navigate to avoid them. As far as I am concerned ERSA is the Bible on this - IF ERSA makes no mention, then any "air" charges are not valid. "....I flight plan around restrictions..." As we all do however if said levy does not appear in ERSA (example: Goulburn) then you may find yourself insuring an unforeseen charge 😈 1 1
skippydiesel Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago 16 minutes ago, BurnieM said: We are now going off at tangents. The law is not clear on whether you 'own' the airspace above your property. It allows for you to use it but in many cases also allows shared use by non-owners. Is it reasonable to try to charge for airspace at a significant height above the owners actual use ? Probably not, unless your objective is simply to repel others. Can we leave it here ? It seems to me that Turbs has "muddied the waters" by introducing the concept of tall buildings and their impact on the freedom to navigate through the air. As an intellectual concept/theory ,this is valid however as a practical application - where the owner of the land has rights to the airspace above therefore can charge/toll passing aircraft its just BS😈 1
facthunter Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Passing over a non controlled aerodrome at any height above 2500" AGL will not interfere with the circuit traffic. A designated training area can be a different matter. Overflying should take account of aircraft descending on track to enter the circuit, but you must also consider traffic in and out on other tracks. Nev 1
turboplanner Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 3 hours ago, skippydiesel said: It seems to me that Turbs has "muddied the waters" by introducing the concept of tall buildings and their impact on the freedom to navigate through the air. As an intellectual concept/theory ,this is valid however as a practical application - where the owner of the land has rights to the airspace above therefore can charge/toll passing aircraft its just BS😈 No you can't say that; you need to research the principle before jumping to conclusions. I only used buildings as an example of where you might own the property, but other laws apply. Out in hilly country you might own a farm but find that you can't build your house on top of a hill; it has to be below the sightlines. 1 1
turboplanner Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 3 hours ago, skippydiesel said: As far as I am concerned ERSA is the Bible on this - IF ERSA makes no mention, then any "air" charges are not valid. "....I flight plan around restrictions..." As we all do however if said levy does not appear in ERSA (example: Goulburn) then you may find yourself insuring an unforeseen charge 😈 That would be the ideal.
skippydiesel Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, turboplanner said: No you can't say that; you need to research the principle before jumping to conclusions. I only used buildings as an example of where you might own the property, but other laws apply. Out in hilly country you might own a farm but find that you can't build your house on top of a hill; it has to be below the sightlines. A sight line issue is usually something to do with a visual amenity/historic vista or some such - very long bow, in try in linking that to the right of air navigation😈
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