Informed Pilots:
After reading yesterday's post in General Discussions titled "400 foot elevation" I have some questions.
If one completes the Part 107 Exam and receives their the FAA credential are they thereby a "commercial pilot" or must they be in the process of engaging in commercial work to hold the status. In other words, once one holds the commercial status are they never again a hobbyist flyer?
Please do not interpret this question as a quest for rationale to engage in dangerous behavior, but in the 400 Foot Elevation string it is apparent that the existing rules seem to imply night flying and exceeding 400 feet AGL is not specifically restricted for hobbyists. If that is correct I could imagine an FAA certified pilot going out into his or her backyard one night to film a solar eclipse moonrise like the one we had here in Hawaii the other night. If so, would that pilot be a hobbyist acting in the absence FAA governance or a Commercial UAA pilot clearly breaking the rules who should know better?
Aloha,
Jim

Photo Credit: BigIslandNow.com
After reading yesterday's post in General Discussions titled "400 foot elevation" I have some questions.
If one completes the Part 107 Exam and receives their the FAA credential are they thereby a "commercial pilot" or must they be in the process of engaging in commercial work to hold the status. In other words, once one holds the commercial status are they never again a hobbyist flyer?
Please do not interpret this question as a quest for rationale to engage in dangerous behavior, but in the 400 Foot Elevation string it is apparent that the existing rules seem to imply night flying and exceeding 400 feet AGL is not specifically restricted for hobbyists. If that is correct I could imagine an FAA certified pilot going out into his or her backyard one night to film a solar eclipse moonrise like the one we had here in Hawaii the other night. If so, would that pilot be a hobbyist acting in the absence FAA governance or a Commercial UAA pilot clearly breaking the rules who should know better?
Aloha,
Jim

Photo Credit: BigIslandNow.com