We ask questions to clear up confusion so I am sorry if you don't like teaching people. Fact is that most cities and/or regions have FAA officials and they are the people that you are most likely to be dealing with on an ongoing basis. Correct a law enforcement officer is one thing because they may not understand or have been misinformed, but to get into a discussion like that directly with FAA personnel is a different matter. The other part of confusion is that I have said the same thing twice and you answered it differently each time.
chasco said:
From a conversation I had with our local official he mentioned that even though you are flying "recreationally" that being 107 registered and licensed you're are still subject to those regulations. ???
phaedrus said:
Yes, which is exactly what I said above
So which is it? The other conflict that I keep seeing is that when you register recreationally it is more of a pilot registration number than it is an individual aircraft number. Part 107 registrations are specific to each aircraft whereas a recreational registration can be applied to the recreational user's fleet as desired. If you are flying at night "recreationally" and run into a situation where you have to provide your information then your are a Part 107 pilot with a Part 107 registered aircraft. That's simple.
That said, I do agree with the fly at will. I am just asking simple questions that could come up for a variety of reasons.