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Sightseeing Over London

LHR airspace is Class D now (used to be Class A few years ago with old UK PPL SVFR you need +100km visibility and +10km from clouds ), transiting Denham to Fairoaks while saying west of M25 is still doable at 1000ft with VFR clearance from Heathrow Radar 125.625, I don’t think there is much “glide clear” issues around that area…

Last Edited by Ibra at 24 Sep 15:23
Paris/Essex, France/UK, United Kingdom

Low level throught Heathrow is still available, safe enough and with some good scenery.

Can you tell me (well, us) more? I really thought going anywhere near LHR in ANYTHING that isn’t a turbine twin+ or heli was a total no-no. I’ve flown SVFR through their airspace, but just touching the fringes on a flight from White Waltham to Stapleford.

LFMD, France

Only when chasing Spitfires

Paris/Essex, France/UK, United Kingdom

Ibra wrote:

Plus the right to overfly Westminster for those birds is grandfathered since 1940 !

Would a Bf 109 or a Stuka also qualify, for the same reasons ?

Low-hours pilot
EDVM Hildesheim, Germany

Ibra wrote:

Plus the right to overfly Westminster for those birds is grandfathered since 1940 !

Haha. Yes, WWII military aircraft are of course unaware of lines on the map drawn by contemporary administrators!

Sans aircraft at the moment :-(, United Kingdom

Canuck wrote:

I guess they get an exemption through the special process

I see 4 engines with 4000hp not a single C172 with 160hp, so what was your question?
Plus the right to overfly Westminster for those birds is grandfathered since 1940 !

Last Edited by Ibra at 24 Sep 13:12
Paris/Essex, France/UK, United Kingdom

To follow up on this, I have seen the Cessna 172 a couple of times since my first post, so it was not a one off. It also showed on FR24 with the registration (which I won’t post here :-)).

Also, last week was the formation flypast with 3 Spitfires and a Hurricane, all at low level. I guess they get an exemption through the special process .

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-54222321



Last Edited by Canuck at 24 Sep 12:22
Sans aircraft at the moment :-(, United Kingdom

There is no problem with a special clearance all the way down the Thames, I have done it a few times in the twin and its very scenic.

I use to do the Lea Valley all the time to check up on my birds with a feather in a single, but that was many years ago, and since the rules changed I shant be going that way again in a SEP. I never saw it as a problem unitl perhaps you got south of the Thames, when for a short distance, and forced landing would have been interesting.

Low level throught Heathrow is still available, safe enough and with some good scenery.

Of course between Canary Wharf & Vauxhall bridge there is no way you can make that legal a single and you need a twin (maybe with 70kts winds at 2000ft amsl or +300kts ASI on spitfire?), Thames/Heathrow sometimes do remind single pilot who ask for that clearance, I heard that once, but I also heard them offering that clearance to DA40 (confused with DA42) or SR22 (maybe the chute works)

West of Heathrow and East of Canary Wharf, there are two runways down bellow your wing and they count for compliance if you are happy to pay the landing fee one day

Now can you a lap of the Shard in a Cri-Cri? yes and someone already did it !

Last Edited by Ibra at 23 Sep 18:05
Paris/Essex, France/UK, United Kingdom

I had a fair bit of time on some nice photo or AtoA AOC in a Seneca 1 over London. Fuel load was typically just 60 USG, and only four pax, and OEI climb performance at those weights were fine (400 fpm).

The Seneca 1 is a good workhorse with excellent single engine manners, admittedly in low density altitude conditions.

The Dragon Rapide ride sounds quite fun, although when the AOC was running the ride round London was around £75 per pax in a Seneca 1.

Oxford (EGTK), United Kingdom
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