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A frenchman I know is going to school here in the states and is interested
in getting his private pilot's license. He asked me if the lincense he got here would hold any weight in France when he went back home after school. Anybody know the international policies on stuff like that? -Dan |
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"Damn Dan" wrote in message ...
A frenchman I know is going to school here in the states and is interested in getting his private pilot's license. He asked me if the lincense he got here would hold any weight in France when he went back home after school. Anybody know the international policies on stuff like that? -Dan In the US, FAA will issue you a restricted private pilot certificate if you have a foreign license. The certificate will be valid as long as your foriegn license and medical are valid. I imagine France would do the same if you produce a U.S. certificate and medical. However, this is only meant as a temporary solution. If you are going to be living in that country for any significant length of time, then it is best to go through the normal channels to get the unrestricted license. |
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He should ask the DGAC (=French FAA) - like the FAA, they
have regional offices at major airports. However the answer is that it will do him no good unless he flies an N-registered plane. The DGAC will issue an equivalency document on the basis of an FAA PPL - EXCEPT for EU citizens who do not have the right of residency in the US (Green Card or US Citizenship). As I discovered when I tried to do this (and I'm not even French - but I am an EU citizen) - the guy at the DGAC in Nice was very pleasant about it but said that unless I had a Green Card there was nothing they could do. I assume the reason for this is precisely to stop people doing what your friend wants to do, i.e. doing all the work in the US then getting a French licence by equivalency. John "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message om... "Damn Dan" wrote in message ... A frenchman I know is going to school here in the states and is interested in getting his private pilot's license. He asked me if the lincense he got here would hold any weight in France when he went back home after school. Anybody know the international policies on stuff like that? -Dan In the US, FAA will issue you a restricted private pilot certificate if you have a foreign license. The certificate will be valid as long as your foriegn license and medical are valid. I imagine France would do the same if you produce a U.S. certificate and medical. However, this is only meant as a temporary solution. If you are going to be living in that country for any significant length of time, then it is best to go through the normal channels to get the unrestricted license. |
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On Tue, 30 Mar 2004 10:25:01 -0800, "John Harper"
wrote: I assume the reason for this is precisely to stop people doing what your friend wants to do, i.e. doing all the work in the US then getting a French licence by equivalency. Doing so is very common, actually. It's much cheaper to get your license in the US than it is in Europe, so the US has flight schools that will produce your private ticket in two weeks, with room and board included, which are advertised in Europe. I know two Germans who have gotten licenses this way, as well as one Briton. When they told me how much money they saved, I was quite surprised. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#5
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Yes, but they get a JAA license, not an FAA one -
it's perfectly OK to do all of your training in a different country from the one the license is valid for, as long as you do it under the jurisdiction of the target country. What the DGAC is trying to avoid (I presume) is people circumventing their jurisdiction. You could argue that it doesn't matter, because one country's pilot license is pretty much the same as another's. I'd agree, but if the DGAC/CAA/etc followed that line of thinking to its logical conclusion they'd disappear in a puff of JAA smoke. Which was pretty much the intent behind the establishment of the JAA, and which the DGAC/CAA/etc have now spent several years successfully resisting. John "Mary Shafer" wrote in message ... On Tue, 30 Mar 2004 10:25:01 -0800, "John Harper" wrote: I assume the reason for this is precisely to stop people doing what your friend wants to do, i.e. doing all the work in the US then getting a French licence by equivalency. Doing so is very common, actually. It's much cheaper to get your license in the US than it is in Europe, so the US has flight schools that will produce your private ticket in two weeks, with room and board included, which are advertised in Europe. I know two Germans who have gotten licenses this way, as well as one Briton. When they told me how much money they saved, I was quite surprised. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
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