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So, I'm totally expecting to be blasted by a Professional Pilot for asking this question ....
I've been asked to video some fireworks after a baseball game in August. They know that the approval may not come in since it's "short notice" according to the FAA and their "we'll tell you, maybe in 90 days" thing. So I want to make sure I get everything right the first time, or if it's even worth applying due to the way the grid doesn't exactly match the Class B airspace boundary.
The ballpark is outside of the Class B to Surface boundary. However, Class B to surface does cut partially into a grid square on the FAA's published altitude requests that they can authorize. So the grid covers the ballpark, but the ballpark isn't really in Class B to Surface airspace. Make sense?
According to the grid, they will only approve 100' AGL due Class B. They would go 400 since it's at the far edge of the airspace, but there is a hospital heliport nearby. However, the ballpark has the NOTAM issued and contacts the tower prior to the start of the show, and after completion of the show. I would personally call and alert Wing prior.
It's a low altitude show, largest shells being 3" lifted to 500 feet. So I want to request 700 feet, only during the show window.
My questions: When requesting approval, does the FAA go by the grid or the actual Class B airspace boundary?
Anything specific I should mention to tie this in with the NOTAM. I mean, you'd think it would be obvious, I'm requesting permission to film a fireworks display, so there's obviously a NOTAM. But, I want to spell it out.
There's no guarantee this will get approved in time, so I only have one shot to file it and make it right if I even want to hope for getting an approval to 700' for the dates. We're less than 90 days out.
Thanks.
Edit: I may have found a loophole, however ... we're allowed to go 400' above a structure, within 400' of the structure. The light towers! Stay within 400' of those, and I get some extra altitude.
I've been asked to video some fireworks after a baseball game in August. They know that the approval may not come in since it's "short notice" according to the FAA and their "we'll tell you, maybe in 90 days" thing. So I want to make sure I get everything right the first time, or if it's even worth applying due to the way the grid doesn't exactly match the Class B airspace boundary.
The ballpark is outside of the Class B to Surface boundary. However, Class B to surface does cut partially into a grid square on the FAA's published altitude requests that they can authorize. So the grid covers the ballpark, but the ballpark isn't really in Class B to Surface airspace. Make sense?
According to the grid, they will only approve 100' AGL due Class B. They would go 400 since it's at the far edge of the airspace, but there is a hospital heliport nearby. However, the ballpark has the NOTAM issued and contacts the tower prior to the start of the show, and after completion of the show. I would personally call and alert Wing prior.
It's a low altitude show, largest shells being 3" lifted to 500 feet. So I want to request 700 feet, only during the show window.
My questions: When requesting approval, does the FAA go by the grid or the actual Class B airspace boundary?
Anything specific I should mention to tie this in with the NOTAM. I mean, you'd think it would be obvious, I'm requesting permission to film a fireworks display, so there's obviously a NOTAM. But, I want to spell it out.
There's no guarantee this will get approved in time, so I only have one shot to file it and make it right if I even want to hope for getting an approval to 700' for the dates. We're less than 90 days out.
Thanks.
Edit: I may have found a loophole, however ... we're allowed to go 400' above a structure, within 400' of the structure. The light towers! Stay within 400' of those, and I get some extra altitude.
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