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#1
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I'll be in the UK (Cambridge) in late September for a conference, and am
thinking about heading over there early for some flying. I have a US PPL Glider, but not a US medical, which is not required for gliders. Will I need a US or UK medical validation to fly solo in the UK? Any other formal requirements (licensing or otherwise), other than the obvious check ride requirements wherever I end up? Thanks, Marc |
#2
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Hi Marc
I have flown at Lasham and Nympsfield on several occasions under instruction and as PIC and was never asked for medical info of any kind. Most clubs will ask you to pay a daily membership (usually ridiculously cheap) but you need to provide the name of your host club in the states- I used Hollister Gliding Club but Valley Soaring Assn would do fine too. Give my regards to Cambridge - Try and get round Kings College if term hasnt started yet - worth the visit. Kind Regards 2T At 21:42 15 August 2006, Marc Ramsey wrote: I'll be in the UK (Cambridge) in late September for a conference, and am thinking about heading over there early for some flying. I have a US PPL Glider, but not a US medical, which is not required for gliders. Will I need a US or UK medical validation to fly solo in the UK? Any other formal requirements (licensing or otherwise), other than the obvious check ride requirements wherever I end up? Thanks, Marc |
#3
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There is no glider pilot licence as such, yet, in the UK, so there are
no medical requirements other than the common sense that you use for driving your car. Where you fly may be interested in looking at your logbook to make an entry after you have successfully flown dual to clear you to fly single seaters. You may be asked what badge you have, silver, gold etc. This is often a better guide to flying capabilities than hours. Currency is also of interest. When did you last fly, how many hours have you flown this year? When you come back to fly the next day or weekend be sure to seek out the instructor in charge, it could be different from the one you saw on the previous occasion as most instructors are volunteers. They will want to see what the previous instructor wrote in your logbook before you can fly. A CFI in the UK is the chief flying instructor of a club, whom you may well not meet. The regular full category or assistant category instructors usually do most of the heavy lifting. They are club members and volunteer for free. Each UK club has local flying rules, so you should plan to aquaint yourself with them. UK clubs are not like commerial glider operations in the US. Plan to help others launch and stick around to put the gliders away at the end of the day. Enjoy kernow Marc Ramsey wrote: I'll be in the UK (Cambridge) in late September for a conference, and am thinking about heading over there early for some flying. I have a US PPL Glider, but not a US medical, which is not required for gliders. Will I need a US or UK medical validation to fly solo in the UK? Any other formal requirements (licensing or otherwise), other than the obvious check ride requirements wherever I end up? Thanks, Marc |
#4
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At 21:42 15 August 2006, Marc Ramsey wrote:
I'll be in the UK (Cambridge) in late September for a conference, and am thinking about heading over there early for some flying. I have a US PPL Glider, but not a US medical, which is not required for gliders. Will I need a US or UK medical validation to fly solo in the UK? Any other formal requirements (licensing or otherwise), other than the obvious check ride requirements wherever I end up? Thanks, Marc Marc. I hope you have an enjoyable stay in the UK, and that the weather is kind to you... Forget all the ill-advised drivel written so far and have a look at the UK Gliding Medical Standards, which you can view in the BGA website at www.gliding.co.uk/bgainfo/medic al.htm The medical requirements apply to all pilots wishing to fly solo in the UK. Al |
#5
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The UK requirements are quite explicit - essentially,
you need a simple self-declaration form but it must be countersigned by a UK doctor 'who has seen and read your entire medical history'. This is probably unlikely for a US resident. There does not appear to be any way around this. For most other non-UK countries, the medical requirements are stricter, and an ICAO [=FAA ?] class 2 medical is required. If you have one of these then you are automatically OK in UK. Anyone have recent experience [other than ignoring the law] ? Ian At 10:30 16 August 2006, Al Eddie wrote: At 21:42 15 August 2006, Marc Ramsey wrote: I'll be in the UK (Cambridge) in late September for a conference, and am thinking about heading over there early for some flying. I have a US PPL Glider, but not a US medical, which is not required for gliders. Will I need a US or UK medical validation to fly solo in the UK? Any other formal requirements (licensing or otherwise), other than the obvious check ride requirements wherever I end up? Thanks, Marc Marc. I hope you have an enjoyable stay in the UK, and that the weather is kind to you... Forget all the ill-advised drivel written so far and have a look at the UK Gliding Medical Standards, which you can view in the BGA website at www.gliding.co.uk/bgainfo/medic al.htm The medical requirements apply to all pilots wishing to fly solo in the UK. Al |
#6
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Ian Cant wrote:
The UK requirements are quite explicit - essentially, you need a simple self-declaration form but it must be countersigned by a UK doctor 'who has seen and read your entire medical history'. This is probably unlikely for a US resident. There does not appear to be any way around this. This rule is a BGA rule, and so the BGA could decide what you would need to provide to satisfy them. Email them at . The relevant form which needs to be countersigned by a doctor is downloadable from http://www.gliding.co.uk/bgainfo/medical.htm (for some reason the form refers to NPPL and ballooning, but it is the right form - I renewed mine recently and checked this with the BGA). The relevant standard is that your doctor knows of no reason why you are not medically fit to drive a car. I'd suggest that you ask the BGA whether such a signed certification from your US doctor would satisfy them - if so, take their email plus the signed medical form to the gliding club and hey presto! Wherever you fly, you should take a winch launch if that's not available to you in the States - Cambridge has both winch and aerotow, as do all the other nearby clubs I can think of. |
#7
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![]() Ian Cant wrote: For most other non-UK countries, the medical requirements are stricter, and an ICAO [=FAA ?] class 2 medical is required. If you have one of these then you are automatically OK in UK. In US an FAA class 2 medical is only required while excercising the privileges of a commercial certificate. I would hope an FAA class 3 would be sufficient for UK gliding as it is far more stringent than being ok to drive a car. Perhaps ICAO class 2 is not equivalent to FAA class 2, anyone know? Andy |
#8
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Ian Cant wrote:
The UK requirements are quite explicit - essentially, you need a simple self-declaration form but it must be countersigned by a UK doctor 'who has seen and read your entire medical history'. This is probably unlikely for a US resident. There does not appear to be any way around this. For most other non-UK countries, the medical requirements are stricter, and an ICAO [=FAA ?] class 2 medical is required. If you have one of these then you are automatically OK in UK. Anyone have recent experience [other than ignoring the law] ? Ian Lasham were quite happy with my South African CAA Class 4 medical and GPL... Bruce |
#9
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Following up on my original post, I contacted the BGA Office and
received the following from Peter Saundby, BGA Medical Adviser: ==== A UK CAA NPPL medical declaration signed by a US doctor is acceptable. The only qualification is that the doctor must have seen you previously and hold clinical records. ==== Thanks for all of the responses, even those that weren't quite right 8^) Marc |
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