Advanced Drone Operations Certificate Exam
Questions And Answers
Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems - Answer RPAS
Canadian Aviation Regulations - Answer CARs
Canadian Aviation Regulatory Advisory Council - Answer CARAC
Visual Line-of-Sight - Answer VLOS
Canadian Aviation Regulatory Committee - Answer CARC
Special Flight Operations Certificate - Answer SFOC
CARs - Answer RPAS are regulated according to the .
SFOC - Answer Operations falling outside the scope of the regulations will require a .to
be included here is flying an RPAS beyond VLOS
Aerodrome - Definition Any area of land, water (including the frozen surface thereof) or
other supporting surface used, designed, prepared, equipped or set apart for use either
in whole or in in part for the arrival, departure, movement or servicing of aircraft and
includes includes any buildings, installations and equipment situated thereon or
associated therewith.
Airport - Definition An aerodrome in respect of which a Canadian aviation document is in
force.
,Pilot-in-command - Answer The pilot having responsibility and authority for the
operation and safety of the aircraft during flight time.
ICAO and Transport Canada - Answer Who enforces air law?
International Civil Aviation Organization - Answer ICAO. A United Nations agency. Used
to ensure local civil aviation operations and regulations conform to global norms.
Certified for public use, certified for private use, registered, and military - Answer What
are the four classifications of aerodromes?
Public use certificate and private use certificate - Answer What are the two types of
airports?
Canada Flight Supplement - Answer Canada's official airport directory. Contains
information on all registered Canadian and Atlantic aerodromes and certified airports.
Mandatory Frequency - Answer An advisory service used to exchange information to
help with safety.
122.8 MHz - When ground station exists, answer ATF.
123.2 MHz - When ground station does not exist, answer ATF
Aerodrome Traffic Frequency - Answer ATF
Movement Area, Maneuvering Area, and Apron - Answer The three components of an
aerodrome are:
,Movement Area - Answer Parts of an airport or an aerodrome used for the movement of
aircraft on the surface.
Manoeuvring Area -Answer Those parts of an aerodrome to be used for the take-off,
landing and taxiing of aircraft.
Apron - Answer An area intended for the loading and unloading of passengers and
cargo, the refuelling, servicing, maintenance and parking of the aircraft and movement
of any surface vehicle necessary for the foregoing purpose
Identification - Answer Runways are numbered for the purpose of .
Magnetic bearing - Answer The number assigned to a runway corresponds to its.
Rounded off to the nearest 10 degrees and for convenience the last zero is omitted.
Approach - Answer The runway number is displayed on the .
Far end - Answer What end of the runway is the degrees used to determine the
numbering?
Phonetic Alphabet - Answer Taxiways are labeled according to the .
Two - Answer How many numbers would a single runway that allows takeoff/landing in
both directions have?
R and L - Answer If there are two runways that are parallel to each other, what are
added?
Magnetic - Answer Runways generally use ______________________ north.
True - Answer Runways in the Northern Domestic Airspace use _________________ north.
, Wind Indicators - Answer Used to determine the wind direction and approximate speed.
Into the wind - Answer The safest way to takeoff and land an aircraft is .
Windsock/Wind cone and Tetrahedron/Wind T - Answer Two types of wind indicators
Windsock/Wind cone - Answer Wind blows in the big end and out the small end. Velocity
of the wind is indicated by the extension.
15 knots or more - Answer A standard windsock will fly perfectly horizontal in a wind of .
6 knots - Answer A windsock will hang approximately 30 degrees below the horizontal in
a wind of only .
Upwind Side - Answer Area on the opposite side of then landing runway from the
downwind leg. Approach into this area should be made at our above circuit height.
Circuit Joining Crosswind - Answer Corridor lying between the center of the landing
runway and its upwind end.
Downwind Leg - Answer A flight path opposite to the direction of landing, parallel to the
runway.
Base Leg - Answer Right angle to direction of landing and downwind of the approach.
Final Approach Leg - Answer Flight path in the direction of landing.
IFR and VFR - Answer What are the two sets of rules for flying any aircraft?
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