### Q51: Who bears the responsibility for ensuring that mandatory on-board documents are present and that logbooks are correctly maintained? ^t10q51 - A) The air transport company. - B) The operator of the aircraft. - C) The pilot-in-command. - D) The owner of the aircraft. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) bears ultimate responsibility for ensuring that all required documents are on board and properly maintained before every flight. This is a fundamental principle of aviation law under both ICAO Annex 2 and EASA regulations. Option A (air transport company) and Option B (operator) have general oversight duties but the direct pre-flight responsibility rests with the PIC. Option D (owner) may not even be present at the time of flight. ### Q52: Which activities may the Federal Council require OFAC authorization for? ^t10q52 - A) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft. - B) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft. - C) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization. - D) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, the Federal Council may require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization for all listed special activities: parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights, and aerobatic demonstrations. These activities present elevated safety risks to participants and the public. Option A is too narrow because it excludes parachuting and captive balloons. Option C is wrong because authorization is indeed required. Option D incorrectly limits the requirement to only parachuting and captive balloons. ### Q53: Is dropping objects from an aircraft in flight prohibited in Switzerland? ^t10q53 - A) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited. - B) Yes, it is strictly prohibited. - C) No. - D) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define specific exceptions such as parachuting, emergency drops, or authorised agricultural activities. Option A is wrong because the prohibition is not limited to advertising material. Option B is wrong because exceptions exist -- it is not a strict absolute prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is a general prohibition in place, even though exceptions are possible. ### Q54: Where specifically is the certification basis of an aircraft documented? ^t10q54 - A) In the VFR Manual. - B) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness. - C) In the annex to the noise certificate. - D) In the insurance certificate. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** The certification basis of an aircraft (type certificate data sheet, approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorised flight categories, and required equipment) is documented in the annex to the Certificate of Airworthiness. This annex defines what the aircraft is certified to do. Option A (VFR Manual) contains operational procedures, not certification data. Option C (noise certificate annex) deals only with noise emissions. Option D (insurance certificate) covers financial liability, not airworthiness certification. ### Q55: Your aircraft, not used for commercial traffic, requires repairs abroad. Which statement applies? ^t10q55 - A) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland. - B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC. - C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority. - D) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** For a non-commercial aircraft requiring repairs abroad, the maintenance must be performed by an organisation recognised by the competent aviation authority of the country where the work is done. This provides flexibility while ensuring regulatory oversight. Option A is wrong because repairs are not restricted to Switzerland. Option B is wrong because OFAC recognition is not specifically required for foreign maintenance. Option D is too restrictive because EASA certification is not always required for non-commercial aircraft maintenance in all jurisdictions. ### Q56: A well-known watchmaker has painted an aircraft in the brand's colours with a large watch on its fuselage. Is this allowed? ^t10q56 - A) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft. - B) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft. - C) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable. - D) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Under Swiss law, advertising on aircraft is permitted subject to other provisions of federal legislation, with only one mandatory condition: the nationality and registration marks must remain easily recognisable at all times. No special OFAC authorisation is needed for applying advertising markings. Option A imposes unnecessary conditions (OFAC authorization, no political purpose, limited placement) that are not required. Option B is simply wrong -- advertising is not prohibited. Option D incorrectly requires OFAC authorization. ### Q57: Under what conditions may a person serve as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^t10q57 - A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin. - B) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered. - C) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated. - D) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** A crew member must hold a valid licence issued or recognised by the state of registration of the aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1. The state of registration defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft. Option A and Option D reference the crew member's country of origin, which is irrelevant -- it is the aircraft's state of registration that matters. Option C references the country of operation, which is also not the determining factor under ICAO rules. ### Q58: Under what conditions is it permitted to carry and operate a radio on board? ^t10q58 - A) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio. - B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification. - C) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification. - D) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions must be met: first, authorisation to install and use the radio must have been granted by the competent authority, and second, crew members who operate the radio must hold the corresponding formal qualification (not merely informal training). Option A is wrong because a "radio communication licence" is not the same as installation/use authorisation. Option C introduces an irrelevant technical specification about frequency increments. Option D is wrong because it requires only "training" rather than a formal qualification, which is insufficient. ### Q59: What must a pilot possess to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^t10q59 - A) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology. - B) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used. - C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used. - D) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** All pilots wishing to communicate with ATC must hold a radiotelephony qualification. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots must also possess a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies, as required under Swiss regulations. Option A is insufficient because a course certificate alone does not constitute a formal qualification. Option C omits the radiotelephony qualification entirely. Option D applies the language proficiency requirement universally, but under Swiss rules it is specifically required for aeroplane and helicopter pilots, not necessarily for all pilot categories such as glider or balloon pilots. ### Q60: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which statement is correct? ^t10q60 - A) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness. - B) You are immediately unfit. - C) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner. - D) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition, including the prescription of corrective lenses, must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). The AME will assess whether the change affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions must be placed on the licence. Option A is wrong because even well-corrected deficiencies may require documentation and a medical fitness reassessment. Option B is wrong because a corrective lens prescription does not automatically make a pilot unfit. Option D is wrong because waiting until the next routine examination could mean flying with an unreported medical change, which is not permitted. ### Q61: In which type of airspace may a Special VFR (SVFR) flight be authorized when the ceiling is below 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^t10q61 - A) FIR. - B) TMA. - C) CTR. - D) AWY. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) flights can only be authorised within a CTR (Control Zone), which is the controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome. When meteorological conditions fall below normal VMC minima, ATC within the CTR can grant SVFR clearance to permit operations. Option A (FIR) is too broad -- SVFR is not applicable to the entire flight information region. Option B (TMA) is terminal airspace above the CTR, not the zone where SVFR applies. Option D (AWY) is an airway where SVFR is not authorised. ### Q62: What evasive action should the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks generally take? ^t10q62 - A) One continues on track while the other turns right. - B) One turns left, the other turns right. - C) Each pilot turns left. - D) Each pilot turns right. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, the standard ICAO evasive action for converging aircraft is that each pilot turns right, ensuring both aircraft pass behind one another and diverge safely. This symmetrical rule eliminates ambiguity about who should manoeuvre. Option A is wrong because both aircraft must take action, not just one. Option B (one left, one right) would be uncoordinated and could worsen the situation. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. ### Q63: What are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements for VFR flight in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^t10q63 - A) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water. - B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m. - C) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m. - D) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescribes VMC minima of: 5 km visibility, 1,500 m horizontal cloud distance, and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertical cloud distance. These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band. Option A describes conditions applicable to lower uncontrolled airspace. Option B uses 8 km visibility and 450 m vertical clearance, which do not match any standard SERA values for this context. Option D omits the required cloud distance values. ### Q64: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which ones are classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q64 - A) D, C - B) G, E, D, C - C) E, D, C - D) E, C **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D, and E are all classified as controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist in the ICAO classification system but are not used in Switzerland. Option A omits Class E, which is controlled airspace (though VFR traffic does not receive separation in it). Option B incorrectly includes Class G, which is uncontrolled. Option D omits Class D, which is definitely controlled airspace surrounding many Swiss aerodromes. ### Q65: According to the applicable rules of the air, what is the definition of "day"? ^t10q65 - A) The period from sunrise to sunset. - B) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer. - C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight. - D) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight -- roughly 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. This broader definition gives pilots additional usable daylight at both ends. Option A (sunrise to sunset) is too restrictive and is the astronomical definition, not the aviation one. Option B uses fixed clock times that do not account for seasonal and geographic variations. Option C reverses the twilight references, which would result in a shorter rather than longer period. ### Q66: What constitutes an aviation accident? ^t10q66 - A) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured. - B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired. - C) The crash of an aircraft. - D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is defined as an event associated with aircraft operation resulting in either fatal/serious injury to persons OR significant structural damage that impairs the aircraft's integrity, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify an event as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting aircraft damage. Option B is too broad -- not every repair constitutes an accident. Option C (crash) is too narrow and not the formal definition. ### Q67: You wish to carry out private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete to limit your civil liability? ^t10q67 - A) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept. - B) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability. - C) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability. - D) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Issuing a transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for baggage damage and delays. Option A is incorrect because special passenger insurance is not the mechanism for limiting civil liability under the Convention. Option B is wrong because the Montreal Convention does not release pilots from all liability -- it caps liability under certain conditions. Option C (liability waiver) is not a legally recognised mechanism under international aviation law. ### Q68: What type of information is disseminated through an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^t10q68 - A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration. - B) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters. - C) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual. - D) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** An AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains supplementary information that does not meet the criteria for publication as a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but is still relevant to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative, and legislative matters. It fills the gap between urgent NOTAMs and permanent AIP entries. Option A describes NOTAM-type information rather than AIC content. Option C is completely wrong -- an AIC is not an IFR manual. Option D reverses the relationship: AICs contain information that does NOT justify a NOTAM, not information that does. ### Q69: What does the aerodrome operations manual govern? ^t10q69 - A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome. - B) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services. - C) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator. - D) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual is a comprehensive document governing all operational aspects of the aerodrome: its organisation, opening hours, approach and take-off procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, ground vehicles), and ground handling services. Option A is wrong because maintenance organisation certification is handled by EASA/national authorities, not the aerodrome operations manual. Option C covers employment matters unrelated to aerodrome operations. Option D covers commercial businesses, which are outside the scope of the operations manual. ### Q70: What does this ground signal indicate? (Two dumbbells) ^t10q70 > **Ground signal:** > ![[figures/t10_q70.png]] > *Two dumbbells -- signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.* - A) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other manoeuvres may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways. - B) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only. - C) Caution during takeoff or landing. - D) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only. **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area means that landings and take-offs must be made on runways only, but other manoeuvres such as taxiing, turning, and positioning may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways on the grass or other surfaces. Option B is too restrictive because it confines all manoeuvres to runways and taxiways (that would be the dumbbell with a cross bar). Option C describes a different signal entirely. Option D introduces "hard-surfaced" which is not what this signal communicates. ### Q71: When two aircraft approach each other head-on, what manoeuvre must both pilots perform? ^t10q71 - A) Each turns left. - B) One turns right, the other turns left. - C) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right. - D) Each turns right. **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210(c) and ICAO Annex 2, when two aircraft are on head-on or nearly head-on courses, both pilots must alter heading to the right, each passing the other on their left side. This mirrors road traffic conventions and eliminates ambiguity. Option A (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to pass on the wrong side and could lead to collision. Option B (one left, one right) is uncoordinated and dangerous. Option C (one straight, one turns) is incorrect because both pilots must take evasive action. ### Q72: Which of the following airspaces are not classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q72 - A) Class G airspace. - B) Class G and E airspaces. - C) Class C airspace. - D) Class G, E and D airspaces. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** In Switzerland, Classes G and E are not classified as controlled airspace for VFR traffic purposes. Class G is uncontrolled airspace, and Class E, while technically controlled for IFR flights, provides no ATC separation for VFR traffic. Option A is incomplete because it lists only Class G and omits Class E. Option C is wrong because Class C is definitely controlled airspace. Option D incorrectly includes Class D, which is a controlled airspace requiring ATC clearance. ### Q73: To which authority has the Federal Council delegated aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^t10q73 - A) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide). - B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland. - C) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC). - D) The cantonal police forces. **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which in turn delegates operational supervision to FOCA (Federal Office of Civil Aviation, known as BAZL/OFAC). Option A (Skyguide) provides air navigation services but is not the regulatory oversight authority. Option B (Aero-Club) is a private association, not a government supervisory body. Option D (cantonal police) have no aviation oversight role. ### Q74: For which of the following flights is filing a flight plan mandatory? ^t10q74 - A) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura. - B) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services. - C) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop. - D) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a VFR flight plan is mandatory when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services, such as transiting a CTR, TMA, or other controlled airspace where ATC interaction is needed. Option A (Alps/Pre-Alps/Jura) does not automatically require a flight plan. Option C (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan trigger. Option D (Class E airspace) is incorrect because VFR flights in Class E do not require ATC services or a flight plan. ### Q75: What minimum height must be maintained above densely populated areas during VFR flight? ^t10q75 - A) At least 300 m above the ground. - B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. - C) At least 150 m above the ground. - D) At least 450 m above the ground. **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2, the minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m (approximately 500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-clearance-based rule ensures safe separation from structures and terrain. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacles. Option C (150 m AGL) ignores the obstacle clearance requirement. Option D (450 m AGL) is not the standard minimum height specified in SERA.