### Q1: An SPL or LAPL(S) licence holder has logged 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches and 2 bungee launches over the past 24 months. Which launch methods is the pilot permitted to use as PIC today? ^t10q1 - A) Aero-tow and bungee. - B) Winch and aero-tow. - C) Winch and bungee. - D) Winch, bungee and aero-tow. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL, a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a given method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC with that method. Here the pilot has 9 winch launches (meets the threshold) and 2 bungee launches (also meets the threshold, as the minimum for bungee is lower). However, with only 4 aero-tow launches the pilot falls short of the required 5, so aero-tow is not permitted. Option A is wrong because it includes aero-tow. Option B is wrong because it also includes aero-tow. Option D includes all three methods, but aero-tow is not qualified. Only Option C correctly lists winch and bungee. ### Q2: Which documents are required to be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^t10q2 - A) A, b, c, e, f - B) D, f, g - C) B, c, d, e, f, g - D) A, b, e, g **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require the Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 release document (d), the journey log (e), crew licences and medical certificates (f), and the technical logbook (g). Option A omits Form-1 and the technical logbook. Option B is far too limited. Option D omits critical documents like the ARC and crew papers. Option C provides the complete standard EASA enumeration for international flight. ### Q3: Which type of area may be entered subject to certain conditions? ^t10q3 - A) Dangerous area - B) No-fly zone - C) Prohibited area - D) Restricted area **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) may be entered subject to conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority. Option A (dangerous area, designated "D") contains hazards but has no legal entry restriction -- pilots may enter at their own risk. Option B (no-fly zone) is not a standard ICAO classification. Option C (prohibited area, designated "P") forbids all flight unconditionally. Only Option D correctly describes airspace that permits conditional entry. ### Q4: In which publication can the specific restrictions for a restricted airspace be found? ^t10q4 - A) NOTAM - B) AIP - C) AIC - D) ICAO chart 1:500000 **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary authoritative document containing permanent information about airspace structure, including the detailed conditions, activation times, and authority contacts for restricted areas in the ENR section. Option A (NOTAMs) may announce temporary changes but do not define the base restrictions. Option C (AICs) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace definitions. Option D (ICAO charts) show boundaries graphically but do not detail the specific restrictions and conditions for entry. ### Q5: What legal status do the rules and procedures established by EASA have? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5 - A) They hold the same status as ICAO Annexes - B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance - C) They are part of EU regulation and legally binding across all EU member states - D) They become legally binding only after ratification by individual EU member states **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification, making them immediately binding. Option A is wrong because ICAO Annexes are standards and recommended practices requiring national adoption, not equivalent to EU law. Option B is incorrect because EASA rules are fully legally binding. Option D is wrong because EU Regulations do not require individual state ratification. ### Q6: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q6 - A) 12 months - B) 6 months - C) 12 years - D) Unlimited **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) has unlimited validity -- once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft meets its type design standards and is properly maintained. What requires periodic renewal (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms continuing airworthiness has been verified. Option A (12 months) and Option B (6 months) confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period for any certificate. ### Q7: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for? ^t10q7 - A) Airspace Restriction Criteria - B) Airworthiness Review Certificate - C) Airworthiness Recurring Control - D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review confirms the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control), and Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law. ### Q8: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q8 - A) In which the airworthiness review is done. - B) In which the aircraft is constructed. - C) In which the aircraft is registered. - D) Of the residence of the owner. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 and Annex 7, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry -- the country where the aircraft is registered. That state bears responsibility for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. Option A (where the review is done) is incorrect because reviews may occur abroad. Option B (where constructed) is irrelevant since manufacturing state differs from registry state. Option D (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance. ### Q9: A pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is recognised in... ^t10q9 - A) The country where the licence was issued. - B) Those countries that have individually accepted this licence upon application. - C) All ICAO contracting states. - D) The country where the licence was acquired. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised across all 193 ICAO Contracting States, enabling international aviation operations without individual country-by-country acceptance. Option A and Option D are essentially the same idea and too restrictive. Option B incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is needed. The universal mutual recognition of Annex 1 licences is a cornerstone of international civil aviation. ### Q10: Which topic does ICAO Annex 1 address? ^t10q10 - A) Rules of the air - B) Operation of aircraft - C) Air traffic services - D) Flight crew licensing **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Option A (Rules of the Air) is Annex 2. Option B (Operation of Aircraft) is Annex 6. Option C (Air Traffic Services) is Annex 11. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement. ### Q11: For a pilot aged 62, how long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid? ^t10q11 - A) 60 Months. - B) 24 Months. - C) 12 Months. - D) 48 Months. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), the validity of a Class 2 medical certificate depends on the pilot's age. For pilots aged 50 and over, validity is reduced to 12 months. At age 62, the 12-month rule clearly applies. Option A (60 months) applies to younger pilots under 40 in some categories. Option B (24 months) applies to pilots aged 40-49. Option D (48 months) is not a standard medical validity period. ### Q12: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^t10q12 - A) Specialized Radar Approach - B) Standard European Routes of the Air - C) Standardized European Rules of the Air - D) Selective Radar Altimeter **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules covering right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, and signals. Option A, Option B, and Option D are invented abbreviations not used in aviation regulation. ### Q13: What does the abbreviation "TRA" stand for? ^t10q13 - A) Terminal Area - B) Temporary Radar Routing Area - C) Temporary Reserved Airspace - D) Transponder Area **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace -- airspace of defined dimensions reserved for a specific activity (military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting) during a published period. TRAs are activated via NOTAM and differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that they may permit shared use under certain conditions. Option A (Terminal Area), Option B (Temporary Radar Routing Area), and Option D (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations. ### Q14: What must be taken into account when entering an RMZ? ^t10q14 - A) The transponder must be switched on Mode C with squawk 7000 - B) A clearance from the local aviation authority must be obtained - C) Continuous radio monitoring is required, and radio contact should be established if possible - D) A clearance to enter the area must be obtained **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact before entry if possible. Option A describes a TMZ requirement (transponder), not an RMZ. Option B and Option D imply formal ATC clearance is needed, which is a CTR requirement, not an RMZ. The RMZ is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements. ### Q15: What does an area designated as "TMZ" signify? ^t10q15 - A) Traffic Management Zone - B) Touring Motorglider Zone - C) Transponder Mandatory Zone - D) Transportation Management Zone **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone -- airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC radar and collision avoidance systems to identify and track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Touring Motorglider Zone), and Option D (Transportation Management Zone) are not recognised aviation terms. ### Q16: A flight is classified as a "visual flight" when the... ^t10q16 - A) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions. - B) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km. - C) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km. - D) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted -- Visual Flight Rules (VFR) -- not by the prevailing weather. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required for VFR, but a flight conducted in VMC could still be flown under IFR. Option A confuses the rule set with weather conditions. Options B and C cite specific visibility values that are VMC minima for particular airspace classes, not the definition of a VFR flight. ### Q17: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^t10q17 - A) Visual flight rules - B) Instrument flight conditions - C) Variable meteorological conditions - D) Visual meteorological conditions **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the specific minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight. If conditions fall below VMC, the airspace is in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC. Option B (Instrument Flight Conditions) is essentially IMC terminology. Option C (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a standard aviation term. VMC and VFR are related but distinct concepts. ### Q18: Two powered aircraft are converging on crossing courses at identical altitude. Which aircraft must give way? ^t10q18 - A) The lighter aircraft must climb - B) Both must turn to the right - C) Both must turn to the left - D) The heavier aircraft must climb **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall alter heading to the right. This ensures both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding collision. Option A and Option D incorrectly introduce weight as a factor, which is irrelevant to crossing right-of-way rules. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. The "turn right" rule is a fundamental ICAO collision avoidance principle. ### Q19: Two aeroplanes are on crossing tracks. Which one must yield? ^t10q19 - A) Both must turn to the left - B) The aircraft approaching from the right has the right of priority - C) Both must turn to the right - D) The aircraft approaching from right to left has the right of priority **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft converge at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. In other words, the aircraft approaching from the right (flying from right to left relative to the other pilot's perspective) has right-of-way. Option A is incorrect as turning left increases collision risk. Option B states the principle backwards. Option C describes the evasive action for head-on encounters, not the right-of-way principle for crossing traffic. ### Q20: What cloud separation must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D and E? ^t10q20 - A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically - B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically - C) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically - D) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, VFR flights in airspace classes C, D, and E must maintain 1500 m horizontal distance from cloud and 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) vertical distance from cloud. The key detail is that horizontal is expressed in metres and vertical in feet -- mixing these units is a common exam trap. Option A uses 1000 m horizontal (too small). Option B uses 1000 m vertical (incorrect unit and value). Option D reverses the horizontal/vertical values. ### Q21: In airspace "E", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q21 - A) 3000 m - B) 5000 m - C) 1500 m - D) 8000 m **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (approximately 7500 ft) falls within this altitude band. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum. Option C (1500 m) applies only in uncontrolled airspace at low altitude. Option D (8000 m) applies at and above FL100, not below it. ### Q22: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q22 - A) 5000 m - B) 8000 m - C) 1500 m - D) 3000 m **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km rule applies. Option A (5000 m) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (3000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR minimum in controlled airspace. ### Q23: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q23 - A) 5000 m - B) 3000 m - C) 1500 m - D) 8000 m **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace including class C. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (3000 m) and Option C (1500 m) apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace. The progression to remember is: low-altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at or above FL100 = 8 km. ### Q24: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^t10q24 - A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft - B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m - C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m - D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Where VFR is permitted in class B airspace, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance, which is insufficient. Option B states 1000 m vertical, which is far too large and uses the wrong value. Option C uses only 1000 m horizontal and the correct vertical, but the horizontal is insufficient. Only Option D provides both correct values. ### Q25: In airspace "C" below FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q25 - A) 10 km - B) 5 km - C) 8 km - D) 1.5 km **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km. Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option C (8 km) applies only at and above FL100. Option D (1.5 km) applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots crossing class C airspace below FL100 must verify at least 5 km visibility.