Cyril Gibb Posted July 18, 2017 Report Posted July 18, 2017 We were in Kufstein Austria yesterday and there was an incredibly quiet single flying around. It couldn't have been electric because a short while later it was towing a glider. What does a Mooney require to meet noise regs? Does it cost much engine power? Does it significantly affect cockpit noise levels? Quote
Guillaume Posted July 27, 2017 Report Posted July 27, 2017 (edited) There is no european noise restrictions as such. It varies from country to country. However we do have european noise certificate. Most noise restrictions are in Germany / Austria where usually a quiet aircraft get a cheap landing fee. A noisy aircraft is going to get an expensive landing fee. In France we have some restrictions at few airfields for noise abatment purposes (ie no VFR traffic pattern during the weekend, airport closes between 2300 and 0600 local...) You obviously can't change the way a Mooney operates (as it was certificated with POH data) so there is no actual change in power / noise level. On a Mooney, the only way to improve the noise level is by changing the prop (per STC). On the M20J, the mt-prop with new blades is supposed to give you better or equal performance. That's why you find a lot of Mooney in Germany with a mt-propeller. Edited July 27, 2017 by Guillaume 1 Quote
Pieter Posted August 9, 2017 Report Posted August 9, 2017 Is there a noise certificate for an Ovation 2? Quote
carusoam Posted August 10, 2017 Report Posted August 10, 2017 Pieter, See if this gets you closer... http://www.mt-propellerusa.com/en/mtusa/stcs/mooney_8.htm It comes from the MT US site... But if it gets you close enough. For contacts or other details.... Best regards, -a- Quote
Guillaume Posted September 16, 2017 Report Posted September 16, 2017 (edited) On 09/08/2017 at 5:05 PM, Pieter said: Is there a noise certificate for an Ovation 2? Yes, because the Ovation 2 (280 hp) is EASA certified. If your aircraft is EASA registered, you should contact your local CAA to get a noise certificate. If it's N-reg, check this. Edited September 16, 2017 by Guillaume Quote
MarkusM Posted May 21, 2020 Report Posted May 21, 2020 On 9/16/2017 at 4:43 PM, Guillaume said: Yes, because the Ovation 2 (280 hp) is EASA certified. If your aircraft is EASA registered, you should contact your local CAA to get a noise certificate. If it's N-reg, check this. And beware, every airfield in Europe does have the freedom to do their landing fee schemes by themselves. It is most common in Europe now to not accept any noise certificate if you are flying on N-reg - bad trap ! Quote
Flocki Posted July 31, 2020 Report Posted July 31, 2020 The plane might have been a microlight. They have a lot stricter noise limits then "classic" planes. Also planes from flight schools tend to use all kind of noise reduction, because on many fields they are otherwise very restricted on flying circuits. Quote
MatthiasArnold Posted October 20, 2020 Report Posted October 20, 2020 On 8/9/2017 at 5:05 PM, Pieter said: Is there a noise certificate for an Ovation 2? For an N-Reg you (like yours) can design your own noise cert based on FAA template and EASA database information. You have to verify S/N and prop based on the EASA Database.. I will enclose the EASA doc and my as template:TCDSN EASA.IM_.A.266 Issue 2.pdfN913KSNoiseCertification.pdf Regards, Matthias 3 1 Quote
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