- Domeniu: Government
- Number of terms: 8785
- Number of blossaries: 0
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Department of the Government of Canada responsible for developing regulations, policies and services of transportation in Canada. It is part of the Transportation, Infrastructure and Communities (TIC) portfolio. Transport Canada is based in Ottawa, Ontario
The means of communication that must normally be adopted by aircraft and ground stations as a first choice where alternative means of communication exist.
Industry:Aviation
The first 3000 ft of the runway or the first third of the runway, whichever is less, measured from the threshold in the direction of landing.
Industry:Aviation
Canada : An expression used in radiocommunications to instruct a pilot to taxi to a point situated 200 ft from the edge of the runway and to stop there.
Note: Used in conjunction with one or several taxiways.
Industry:Aviation
The lowest flight level available for use above the transition altitude.
Industry:Aviation
An area established when it is deemed advantageous or necessary to provide additional controlled airspace for the containment of IFR operations.
Industry:Aviation
An expression used in radiocommunication meaning "My transmission is ended, and I expect a response from you."
Industry:Aviation
The period of time during any day that starts at the end of evening civil twilight and ends at the start of morning civil twilight.
Industry:Aviation
An airspace of defined dimensions, extending to either side of an instrument landing system (ILS) localizer centreline. Only the inner half of the normal operating zone is taken into account in independent approaches.
Industry:Aviation
A request for a pilot to activate the aircraft transponder identification feature.
Industry:Aviation
ICAO: A number expressing the bearing strength of a pavement for unrestricted aircraft operations.
Note: PCNs are expressed on a scale from approximately 5 (weakest pavements) to 110 (strongest pavements) and are linked to the pavement type and a standard subgrade category. Aircraft tyre pressure restrictions, where applicable, are contained within the PCN reporting code. The ICAO PCN system is the internationally approved and accepted method for the reporting of airport pavement bearing strengths. In Canada, the pavement load rating (PLR) chart for each airport reports bearing strength using both the ICAO PCN and the Canadian PLR code.
Industry:Aviation