Jes, my interpretation from the revised CAP722 was that a type or class structure had been developed.
However I was told directly by Euro USC that this was a mistake, or mis-representation by the CAA, of the situation where certification is only valid for the system you have been tested on.
"Unfortunately the amended CAP 722 is incorrectly worded, the BNUC-S is not type specific but is specific to the individual aircraft, so we would need to test you to the actual aircraft that you intend to use for commercial purposes. "
[FONT=Times New Roman,serif][FONT=Calibri,sans-serif]"You must conduct the flight test using the configuration that you will use when operating normally for aerial work. If the payload is operated by another person you will need to bring that person to the flight test or we can provide someone to operate the payload and you must brief them before the flight test."[/FONT][/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman,serif][FONT=Calibri,sans-serif]"With regards to configuration of the aircraft, if you maintain and replace parts that is not an issue but if you fundamentally change the configuration of the aircraft, it is a different aircraft system and you will need to be flight tested against the different machine."[/FONT][/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman,serif][FONT=Calibri,sans-serif]“Do the CAA require an operator to hold a BNUC-S for each and every specific system, regardless of similarity and common type? Reading throught the candidates guide it would appear that it is sufficient to provide a copy of the revised Ops manual.”[/FONT][/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman,serif][FONT=Calibri,sans-serif]"You must be tested to all individual aircraft that you wish to operate and these will be added to your BNUC-S. During each flight test you can be tested to two aircraft systems, if you wish to be certified on more than two systems you will need to book a second flight test."[/FONT][/FONT]