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#1
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I read the the complex endorsement involves being instructed in
retractable gear, flaps and constant speed prop. I'm learning to fly in a C172, which has flaps, so it seems unusual to me that flaps are specified in the complex rating given that I have been using them since day one. The only reasons I can guess that this is pointed out are that A: people learn to fly in planes without flaps or B: flaps are "one more thing to worry about" and so the definition includes all three to make sure the pilot can handle multiple things to worry about in the small amount of time one has to land a plane. I'm leaning toward B but thought I'd ask here. |
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On Feb 24, 2:05*pm, es330td wrote:
I read the the complex endorsement involves being instructed in retractable gear, flaps and constant speed prop. *I'm learning to fly in a C172, which has flaps, so it seems unusual to me that flaps are specified in the complex rating given that I have been using them since day one. A friend of mine used to have a Swift. Retract, with flaps but fixed prop. He never needed a complex endorsement and I always thought that was odd. |
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On Feb 24, 3:05*pm, es330td wrote:
I read the the complex endorsement involves being instructed in retractable gear, flaps and constant speed prop. *I'm learning to fly in a C172, which has flaps, so it seems unusual to me that flaps are specified in the complex rating given that I have been using them since day one. The only reasons I can guess that this is pointed out are that A: people learn to fly in planes without flaps or B: flaps are "one more thing to worry about" and so the definition includes all three to make sure the pilot can handle multiple things to worry about in the small amount of time one has to land a plane. *I'm leaning toward B but thought I'd ask here. Its a holdover from the olden days when flaps weren't standard equipment, as they are now. In the next few months/years the FAA is supposed to redo part 61, and many believe they will change the complex requirement to something more modern. |
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#6
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On Feb 24, 4:40*pm, buttman wrote:
On Feb 24, 3:05*pm, es330td wrote: Its a holdover from the olden days when flaps weren't standard equipment, as they are now. In the next few months/years the FAA is supposed to redo part 61, and many believe they will change the complex requirement to something more modern. Old days as in the 1990's. -Robert |
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#8
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On Feb 24, 5:10*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in news:edbfad8d-752e-47b1-8543- : On Feb 24, 4:40*pm, buttman wrote: On Feb 24, 3:05*pm, es330td wrote: Its a holdover from the olden days when flaps weren't standard equipment, as they are now. In the next few months/years the FAA is supposed to redo part 61, and many believe they will change the complex requirement to something more modern. Old days as in the 1990's. Well, the rules governing this sort of stuff were put in during the major revamp in the 70s, and even then there were very few production aircraft with no flaps.The Citabria ( and some of those had them) Pitts and Great Lakes are the only three that come to mind.. I seem to remember the HP and complex endorsements coming of age in the 90's. Before that I thought there was some sort of a hydrid endorsement. -Robert |
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote in
: On Feb 24, 5:10*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "Robert M. Gary" wrote in news:edbfad8d-752e-47b1-8543- : On Feb 24, 4:40*pm, buttman wrote: On Feb 24, 3:05*pm, es330td wrote: Its a holdover from the olden days when flaps weren't standard equipment, as they are now. In the next few months/years the FAA is supposed to redo part 61, and many believe they will change the complex requirement to something more modern. Old days as in the 1990's. Well, the rules governing this sort of stuff were put in during the major revamp in the 70s, and even then there were very few production aircraft with no flaps.The Citabria ( and some of those had them) Pitts and Great Lakes are the only three that come to mind.. I seem to remember the HP and complex endorsements coming of age in the 90's. Before that I thought there was some sort of a hydrid endorsement. No, definitely in the early to mid seventies. They may have been modified and tweaked in the nineties, but they were definitely around in the seventies. I had to sign quite a few guys off in the Stearman for horsepower only, for instance. There was a major rejigging of the regs around 73 or so. Before that, for instance, if you had a flight instructor raing you could teach in anything you had a rating for. Previous to that if you got a multi engine rating you could teach in twins with no special CFIME add on to your instructor ticket. THe flight instructor ticket was also limited to two years at this point. A lot of further requirements for all ratings were added about this time as well. Night training for the private, for instance. I never had one minute of night instruction and i went off and did night flying the day after I got my private. Next night i did a night cross country.. All legal then. The BFR was also introduced at the same time if I'm not mistaken. I have no idea how to date these changes exactly, but I'm thinking '73-'74. Three inch numbers came in the same year,IIRC. This is the one we found most exciting. Bertie |
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On Feb 24, 6:21*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
No, definitely in the early to mid seventies. They may have been modified and tweaked in the nineties, but they were definitely around in the seventies. I had to sign quite a few guys off in the Stearman for horsepower only, for instance. There was a major rejigging of the regs around 73 or so. Before that, for instance, if you had a flight instructor raing you could teach in anything you had a rating for. My wife's grandfather held a commercial ticket with a flight instructor rating. He still shows up on registry.faa.gov but it says something like "Instructor rating not valid after 197x". I assume that is when they introduced the instructor certificate. However, it makes sense to say if you are rated to fly a ME plane and you have some the ability to teach then why do you need a different checkride for the MEI. -Robert |
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