Airports and FAA

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WA_Sparky

Electrical Engineer
Location
Vancouver, WA, Clark
Occupation
Electrical Engineer
Does anyone have any idea when the FAA regulations do and don't apply for work to be done within an airport fenced in air space? If a maintenance building is detached from the main airport, say at the end of a taxiway a mile away from the main terminals, but still within the fenced-in area, do FAA standards still apply?

Does anyone have any knowledge of how taxiway/runway lighting is typically powered and controlled? I know some have to be on battery back-up and others have to be on normal/emergency power to eliminate single point failure, but are they typically powered and controlled from one general location assuming control tower.
 
Does anyone have any idea when the FAA regulations do and don't apply for work to be done within an airport fenced in air space? If a maintenance building is detached from the main airport, say at the end of a taxiway a mile away from the main terminals, but still within the fenced-in area, do FAA standards still apply?

Does anyone have any knowledge of how taxiway/runway lighting is typically powered and controlled? I know some have to be on battery back-up and others have to be on normal/emergency power to eliminate single point failure, but are they typically powered and controlled from one general location assuming control tower.
As far as the mentioned building - it's existence, size, location in proximity to certain runways, etc. very well may be FAA regulated. As far as how that relates to the electrical trades - might not impact your wiring within said building one bit. May impact runway lighting and other similar items or even items on exterior of said building though.
 
Runway lighting is series wired. At my local airport, unmanned, pilots turn on the lights via a phone call. Several code cycles ago the NEC added a section on series lighting, some were saying the NEC didn’t apply
Read and study the specs, there may be specials that could be costly if missed
 
Taxiway/runway lighting is often a high-voltage series string -- 8000 volts or so -- with intensity controlled by controlling current.
(that information is several years old and there may be more modern approaches in use now)
 
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