Definition
An airplane certificated by the FAA in the standard airworthiness category and used for general aviation purposes (i.e., civil flying other than scheduled airline or military operations). Standard category airplanes are certificated under Part 23 (or its predecessor CAR 3) for normal, utility, acrobatic, or commuter operations and are subject to specific maneuvering and load-factor limitations published in the Airplane Flight Manual.
Plain English
A typical FAA-approved civilian airplane — the kind most pilots train and fly in — that has been certified to meet standard safety rules and is not in a special category like experimental, restricted, or limited.
Context Anchor
In the steep turns chapter, this term helps identify the kind of airplane whose structural limits matter when bank angle and load increase during maneuvering.
Derivation
"Standard" comes from the Old French estandart, meaning a fixed reference or rule. In FAA usage it refers to the baseline airworthiness category that meets standard certification rules — as opposed to special categories (experimental, restricted, limited, provisional) that meet different rules.
Why Pilots Care
Knowing the airplane is standard category confirms it has defined structural and performance limits that must be respected during maneuvers.
Grounding Statement
A steep turn may feel routine, but the airplane still has approved limits that the pilot must not exceed.
Intuition Check
“Standard” does not mean ordinary in the casual sense, and “category” does not mean a loose label. Here, “standard category” means the airplane has a standard FAA airworthiness approval, with specific operating limits.
Example Sentence 1
The 60° bank limit for steep turns described in this chapter applies to standard category general aviation airplanes.
Example Sentence 2
Steep turns in a standard category general aviation airplane must stay within the published maneuvering speed to avoid exceeding structural limits.