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#1
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Guy has an airplane, commercial certificate but no instructor rating
and takes students up for acrobatic lessons, mountain checkouts and charges for it. FAA legal? |
#2
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Guy has an airplane, commercial certificate but no instructor rating
and takes students up for acrobatic lessons, mountain checkouts and charges for it. FAA legal? How could anyone give an endorsement or allow someone log dual time received without and instructor rating? |
#3
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three-eight-hotel wrote:
Guy has an airplane, commercial certificate but no instructor rating and takes students up for acrobatic lessons, mountain checkouts and charges for it. FAA legal? How could anyone give an endorsement or allow someone log dual time received without and instructor rating? It will all get very clear after the "student" has an accident and the NTSB looks into ratings and the qualifications of the person that granted them. |
#4
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Nothing mentioned about giving endorsements. He is just teaching the
pilot acrobatics and how to fly in the mountains. Nothing about the pilot being able to log the flight either. |
#5
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As long as he has a 2nd class medical and the plane has a 100 hr
inspection it should be fine (and doesn't 'transport" people, i.e returns them to the same airport they left). His insurance would probably be pretty high though. Doesn't count as dual or insurance or anything though. In a practical sense, CFIs often have a hard enough time getting business, this guys going to be working hard. -Robert |
#6
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Also, remember that for insurance purposes, the "pilot flying" must
meet the policy requirement. Insurance companies don't worry about this PIC crap. -Robert |
#7
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As long as he does NOT endorse their logbook, yes. Does it
count toward any rating, NO. Is he qualified, maybe. Is his insurance valid, who knows. Has his airplane had the required inspections? Does he have a 135 certificate and does he need one? Probably for the mountain check outs, maybe not for just acro local flights. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm "Doug" wrote in message ups.com... | Guy has an airplane, commercial certificate but no instructor rating | and takes students up for acrobatic lessons, mountain checkouts and | charges for it. FAA legal? | |
#8
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I think that he should read FAR 119.1 (tied to Part 135 operations). The way
I read it, he has to stay within 25 miles of the departure airport and not land anywhere else. Within those restrictions, he seems to be OK. There might be a drug testing question, too, but I'm fuzzy on that. Bob Gardner "Doug" wrote in message ups.com... Guy has an airplane, commercial certificate but no instructor rating and takes students up for acrobatic lessons, mountain checkouts and charges for it. FAA legal? |
#9
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I was interpreting "lessons" and "checkouts" to mean that there would
be some endorsement that went along with that... My bad. I gave my 7 year old daughter a flying lesson a couple of months ago. It was a blast! As far as instruction goes, as you intended, there's no difference? (Except that I'm not a commercial pilot and I didn't charge her ;-) Best Regards, Todd |
#10
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... As long as he has a 2nd class medical I don't believe so. and the plane has a 100 hr inspection I don't believe so. Jim |
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