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General requirements to be met by a CAMO are facilities (offices and documentation storage), a Continuing Airworthiness Management Exposition (CAME) which must be approved by the competent authority of the country or EASA and company procedures (to comply with Part M requirements). A CAMO can also be the operator of the aircraft.
As part of Single European Sky II (SES-II), an initiative to standardize and coordinate all air traffic control over the EU, the agency has been given additional tasks, [5] which were implemented before 2013. [6] [7] Since 4 December 2012, EASA is able to certify functional airspace blocks if more than three parties are involved. [7]
AirX partners with a local operator in the United States who manages two Citation X’s. The Head Office is located in Malta, with other offices in London, U.K. AirX Jet Support is based in Stansted Airport and Malta [3] and has two EASA Part-145 Certificate of Maintenance [4] issued by EASA and maintains both the AirX fleet and third party ...
c:"Import aircraft.") of this section is entitled to a standard airworthiness certificate if -- (1) He presents evidence to the Administrator that the aircraft conforms to a type design approved under a type certificate or a supplemental type certificate and to applicable Airworthiness Directives; (2) The aircraft (except an experimentally ...
Similar standards are maintained by other aviation authorities. For example European Technical Standard Orders (ETSO) by EASA for the European Union, [3] with limited reciprocal equivalence on a per-country basis. [4] These often have the same numbers as FAA TSOs. For example, the FAA TSO for aviation headsets is C139.
EASA wrote a certification memoranda to require the use of DO-254 for all complex electronics within a system, stating that all equipment and CBA with a Design assurance classification of A, B, C or D should meet level D objectives for the equipment and CBA, regardless of the DAL of the system or aircraft function.
A flight deck manual, usually part of a Quick Reference Handbook: CLR Clear Seen on GFA and is used for sky coverage CMC central maintenance computer CMM component maintenance manual CMO Certificate Management Office: FAA CMV converted meteorological visibility: CMPA complex motor-powered aircraft CMU Communications Management Unit CNS
EASA specifies common standards for the licensing of aircraft pilots. EASA does not issue licences, rather licences are issued by member states. [1] However, because the same standards are used, EASA licences are recognised by all member states. Flight Crew Licensing is regulated by the document EU Part-FCL. [2]