| Author : | Message : |
| LFPP2691 | 06/07/2007 à 15h36 |
| Membre Messages : 14 |
Hello flyers, I'm french and I might move to the US for a couple of years.I was woundering if it was expensive to fly over there and if it was easy, I mean by that if there is a lot of aerodromes and landstrips.Is there a lot of air traffic near New York for small civil aircrafts? Thanks a lot! PS : I'm might move near New York. |
![]() |
|
| Curufinwe | 19/07/2007 à 08h42 |
| Administrateur Messages : 1311 |
no idea ... but I guess that near NYC there must be a lot of traffic! _________________ David - Mes photos sur Pictaero |
![]() |
|
| LFPP2691 | 26/08/2007 à 01h55 |
| Membre Messages : 14 |
I suppose so, but its promising for me. But I'm french, and I'm affraid of not understanding a thing of what the monitor will tell me lol.I wonder if the aeronotical vocabulary is exacly the same in the US and France... |
![]() |
|
| Curufinwe | 26/08/2007 à 14h59 |
| Administrateur Messages : 1311 |
I thought the air vocabulary was international ... descend to flight level 150 ... clear to land runway 10 ... etc ... If you are not confident enough, start using English in your daily flights in France ![]() _________________ David - Mes photos sur Pictaero |
![]() |
|
| LFPP2691 | 28/08/2007 à 13h26 |
| Membre Messages : 14 |
The air vocabulary is international, but in France, you need special authoritations to use it and I think you also have an exam. France has many small airstrips, in the US, they are much bigger, so each airstrips has its own members usually, so they don't really bother speaking english or using the exact vocaubulary. I just can't wait to move in |
![]() |
Pages : 1