If airliners are pressurized, then why do my ears pop, and my soda taste funny?
Pressurized aircraft are set up so that at cruise alt. they're never pressurized beyond the equivalent of about 8,000 ft. MSL (to create sea level press. at high altitude would require a much heavier pressure hull); they do so by means of a bleeder valve that's set for a specific pressure. There's an air inlet, with a compressor behind it. The compressor keeps going, pressurising the fuselage, until the valve pops open. Your ears pop during climb and descent because you're going up to or down from 8,000 feet fairly rapidly...
Can you tell how many engines a plane has by its con-trail? 2 trails=2 engines?
Good question. somebody else definitively answered this... I never wondered about that, m'self.
Do you need a rating for adjustable pitch props?
The FAA, FBOs (renters), and insurance companies all require a logbook endorsement to prove you are OK to fly a complex aircraft (this includes retractables). It's usually just one ride with a CFI who is similarly endorsed. Technically, it's not a "rating".
Do you need special certification for each GA plane before you can fly it?
You mean a type rating, yes? No, but in the case of FBOs, they'll want to give you a "checkout ride" even if you've already logged time in the same A.C.
BTW, "general aviation" refers to any civilian aircraft that is not used by a scheduled carrier. Technically,
any a.c. can be considered "GA"... like John Travolta's 707, for example.It's a GA plane that requires a type rating. Doesn't just refer to light aircraft... So, to be a smartass, I'd say technically you
might need a type rating for
some GA aircraft... even a "demilitarized", privately owned jet fighter falls under the term "G.A".
FAA definitions of "type" and "rating":"TYPE- As used with respect to... airmen, means a specific make and basic model of aircraft, including modifications thereto..."
"RATING- means a statement that, as part of a certificate, sets forth special conditions, privileges, or limitations."
For example, my Private Pilot Certificate says: "Ratings: Private Pilot; Airplane, Single Engine Land". There's no mention of an IFR rating, because I don't have one. this means I can't operate any kind of jet, so that's covered by default. No mention of multi-engine a.c. means I can't fly twins, etc. either, without a multiengine (pilot) rating. Likewise seaplanes. I'm also not legal to operate a balloon, blimp, or dirigible, because it says "airplane"...
International Civil Aviation Org. definition of G.A.:"GENERAL AVIATION- All civil aviation operations other than scheduled air services and non-scheduled air transport operations for renumeration or hire."
FAA definition:"GENERAL AVIATION- That portion of civil aviation... except air carriers... and large aircraft commercial operators."