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#1
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![]() A petition to the FAA to eliminate the 3rd Class medical for GA flying. http://www.potomac-airfield.com/dot_petition.htm -- If you look at anything long enough, say just that wall in front of you -- it will come out of that wall. - Anton Chekhov |
#2
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On 10-29-2010 22:23, Bug Dout wrote:
A petition to the FAA to eliminate the 3rd Class medical for GA flying. http://www.potomac-airfield.com/dot_petition.htm Again? This comes up every year (or even more often). I believe the FAA basically says we already have it (Sport Pilot) and has denied it in the past. |
#3
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Scott wrote:
On 10-29-2010 22:23, Bug Dout wrote: A petition to the FAA to eliminate the 3rd Class medical for GA flying. http://www.potomac-airfield.com/dot_petition.htm Again? This comes up every year (or even more often). I believe the FAA basically says we already have it (Sport Pilot) and has denied it in the past. Does this really come up every year? |
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On 10-29-2010 23:59, Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: On 10-29-2010 22:23, Bug Dout wrote: A petition to the FAA to eliminate the 3rd Class medical for GA flying. http://www.potomac-airfield.com/dot_petition.htm Again? This comes up every year (or even more often). I believe the FAA basically says we already have it (Sport Pilot) and has denied it in the past. Does this really come up every year? On various aviation groups or aviaiton websites, etc., yes. Not necessarily just this one. |
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On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 23:22:18 +0000, Scott
wrote: Again? This comes up every year (or even more often). I believe the FAA basically says we already have it (Sport Pilot) and has denied it in the past. I have to say I don't disagree with the logic in the proposal. http://www.regulations.gov/search/Re...ontentType=pdf "FAA's medical exemption is currently exclusive to LSA aircraft, artificially creating an unfair, unnecessary and exclusive market concession for a few LSA manufacturers. FAA medical standards are literally being exploited by industry to force thousands of older pilots to stop using their certified aircraft; so they must either buy a new LSA or quit flying," I think that is essentially true. If it's safe enough for a pilot to fly a new $150,000 LSA with no medical, why isn't it safe for the same pilot to fly a 25 or 30 year old Cessna 172 or 182 or a 25 or 30 year old Piper Cherokee? What do you think? |
#6
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![]() " wrote in message ... If it's safe enough for a pilot to fly a new $150,000 LSA with no medical, why isn't it safe for the same pilot to fly a 25 or 30 year old Cessna 172 or 182 or a 25 or 30 year old Piper Cherokee? What do you think? That's not the greatest argument. I think that there is a pretty big difference between an LSA and a 172/182. There is much less difference between a 150/152 and an LSA. That said, there is really no convincing evidence that a doctor can predict your health over the next two years based on a written form and a quick external physical exam. In fact, there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. In short, the 3rd class medical certificate has no provable safety value and is simply an expensive "gift" to the medical profession at the expense of the aviation community. Vaughn |
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On 10-31-2010 12:19, vaughn wrote:
That said, there is really no convincing evidence that a doctor can predict your health over the next two years based on a written form and a quick external physical exam. In fact, there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. In short, the 3rd class medical certificate has no provable safety value and is simply an expensive "gift" to the medical profession at the expense of the aviation community. Vaughn However, a medical exam may catch a problem that may potentially become "life threatening" or incapacitating that is unknown to the examinee. That is exactly what happens when someone loses their medical...they go in, unknowing that there is any problem and come out with a denied medical. I do agree that there is no guarantee that one will remain healthy in the time between exams. Like I was always told, "You're just one medical away from an ultralight." ![]() |
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" wrote in message
... On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 23:22:18 +0000, Scott wrote: Again? This comes up every year (or even more often). I believe the FAA basically says we already have it (Sport Pilot) and has denied it in the past. I have to say I don't disagree with the logic in the proposal. http://www.regulations.gov/search/Re...ontentType=pdf "FAA's medical exemption is currently exclusive to LSA aircraft, artificially creating an unfair, unnecessary and exclusive market concession for a few LSA manufacturers. FAA medical standards are literally being exploited by industry to force thousands of older pilots to stop using their certified aircraft; so they must either buy a new LSA or quit flying," I think that is essentially true. If it's safe enough for a pilot to fly a new $150,000 LSA with no medical, why isn't it safe for the same pilot to fly a 25 or 30 year old Cessna 172 or 182 or a 25 or 30 year old Piper Cherokee? What do you think? I think that you have it exactly right. Further, I remain displeased that they (FAA) adopted a rule which clearly favored foreign manufacturers. |
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Scott writes:
However, a medical exam may catch a problem that may potentially become "life threatening" or incapacitating that is unknown to the examinee. Yes, but it will miss such problems as often as it catches them. For example, many people who suffer from sudden cardiovascular accidents have no prior history of cardiovascular trouble that would have shown up on an aviation medical exam. Indeed, some pilots who have had heart attacks showed nothing wrong on their exams. Finding people who are truly prone to CVAs requires expensive, time-consuming, highly invasive, unpleasant tests, and even then it's not 100% reliable. Some people can live to 100 with clogged arteries, others succumb abruptly to a thrombus with arteries that are relatively clean. A person who had a couple of seizures in childhood may be disqualified from flying, but in fact there's a very good chance that he'll never have them again if that was the last time they occurred. Here again, there's no way to know. That is exactly what happens when someone loses their medical...they go in, unknowing that there is any problem and come out with a denied medical. I do agree that there is no guarantee that one will remain healthy in the time between exams. Like I was always told, "You're just one medical away from an ultralight." You can also pass a medical with flying colors and die of cardiac arrest on your next flight. It has certainly happened, although medical incapacitation in general is extremely rare. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
FAA petition to eliminate Class 3 medical for Private Pilots | Bug Dout | General Aviation | 10 | November 8th 10 01:45 AM |
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