Proposed ASTM standard will aid in light sport aircraft compliance

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology

ISSN: 0002-2667

Article publication date: 3 July 2009

70

Citation

(2009), "Proposed ASTM standard will aid in light sport aircraft compliance", Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, Vol. 81 No. 4. https://doi.org/10.1108/aeat.2009.12781dab.011

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Proposed ASTM standard will aid in light sport aircraft compliance

Article Type: Safety topics and notes From: Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology: An International Journal, Volume 81, Issue 4

ASTM International Committee F37 on Light Sport Aircraft is currently at work on a proposed new standard that will aid light sport aircraft manufacturers in understanding the standardisation system that governs their products. ASTM WK22124, Guide for Compliance with Light Sport Aeroplane Standards, is under the jurisdiction of the F37.20 Aeroplane subcommittee.

According to Thomas Gunnarson, US FAA, and F37 secretary, the proposed standard will aid the industry in understanding how to use applicable LSA standards to meet applicable regulatory requirements. Manufacturing and distribution personnel who are responsible for assuring conformity to processes and procedures outlined in F37 standards would use WK22124.

Current FAA regulations require a manufacturer’s declaration of compliance to industry consensus standards, which puts responsibility on manufacturers to adhere to the system without traditional FAA oversight found in manufacturing of type certified aircraft. WK22124 will provide manufacturers with the means for understanding how standardisation is involved in light sport aircraft manufacturing and will help define what is behind the Statement of Compliance.

“The proposed guide will be a sort of cookbook providing direction and reference so that an interested party could clearly see the steps involved with LSA compliance and be made fully aware of the responsibilities the manufacturer and personnel assume when they become involved in the process,” says Gunnarson.

Gunnarson notes that the standardised set of guidelines that will be contained in WK22124 will provide a common resource for aviation authorities investigating any part of the compliance process for a particular light sport aircraft. “The proposed guide would be used to educate industry, aviation authorities and users on how to show conformity to ASTM standards and what kind of feedback loop is in place to monitor this activity,” says Gunnarson, who notes that regulators and industry representatives are welcome to join the task group in its ongoing work on WK22124.

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