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#1
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Can a Sport Instructor give a tailwheel signoff to a private
pilot (ASEL)? If he can, are there any limits to what the private pilot can fly? |
#2
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§ 61.413 What are the privileges of my flight instructor
certificate with a sport pilot rating? If you hold a fight flight instructor certificate with a sport pilot rating, you are authorized, within the limits of your certificate and rating, to provide training and logbook endorsements for- (a) A student pilot seeking a sport pilot certificate; (b) A sport pilot certificate; (c) A flight instructor certificate with a sport pilot rating; (d) A powered parachute or weight-shift-control aircraft rating; (e) Sport pilot privileges; (f) A flight review or operating privilege for a sport pilot; short answer, no. "TRA" wrote in message ... | Can a Sport Instructor give a tailwheel signoff to a private | pilot (ASEL)? If he can, are there any limits to what the | private pilot can fly? |
#3
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A sport pilot instructor can only instruct in LSA and can
only sign off sport pilots. It is possible there are some cross-overs, such as tailwheel and a flight review in a LSA would count for a flight review for all higher classes. But the language is clear, a sport pilot instructor can endorse for a sport pilot privilege. Whether that endorsement can be extended beyond the sport pilot to a higher class certificate is up to the FAA. A sport pilot instructor in a J3 Cub (sport class aircraft) and endorse a sport pilot for a tailwheel, but whether it can be extended to a private pilot operating privilege under 61.31 has not been clearly explained. "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote: | | § 61.413 What are the privileges of my flight instructor | certificate with a sport pilot rating? | (f) A flight review or operating privilege for a sport | pilot; | | short answer, no. | | A private pilot is able to operate under the limitations of | a sport pilot. According to my last discussion with the | FAA, a sport instructor can give a flight review to the | holder of a private pilot certificate (or commercial or ATP) | and should require performance up to the sport pilot | standards. That flight review is then valid for the pilot | in all cat/class and for all privileges. If your | interpretation were correct, then the above language (which | covers flight reviews and operating privs - like tailwheel | endorsements) would prohibit the flight reviews too - in | contradiction to what the FAA told me. | | It looks to me like the answer is "yes." A sport pilot | needs the 61.31 tailwheel signoff and any private pilot who | wants to fly a tailwheel airplane under the included sport | pilot privileges of his PP can get the signoff from a sport | instructor. As far as I can see that signoff would then be | good for all tailwheel airplanes, regardless of whether they | are LSAs or not, just as the flight review is valid for all. | For example, there is no multiengine tailwheel endorsement | and you don't need a multiengine instructor to get the | endorsement, yet the endorsement from an ASEL limited | instructor would allow you to fly a multiengine tailwheel | aircraft. | | Of course, this is just my opinion by analogy based on what | the FAA's sport pilot group told me. At the time I spoke | with them they were sort of wondering if it made sense to | allow a flight review to lesser standards, but that was | their interpretation of the regs. Maybe it has changed | since then. | -- | Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. | | (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
#4
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Only the asked question get a ruling.
"T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote: | | A sport pilot instructor can only instruct in LSA | | Correct. | | and can only sign off sport pilots. | | I agree he can only sign off to the sport pilot level. We | are discussing whether he can sign off higher level pilots | to the sport level and whether that signoff then permits the | higher rated pilot to exercise the privileges of his | certificate beyond the sport level. The question is much | like whether a BFR from an ASEL limited instructor permits | the recipient to exercise the privileges of his certificate | in other cat/classes (it does). | | It is possible there are some | cross-overs, such as tailwheel and a flight review in a LSA | would count for a flight review for all higher classes. | | I was interested, so I called the AOPA legal hotline for | their interpretation. They say that the sport pilot | instructor can give flight reviews and signoffs under 61.31 | to appropriately cat/class rated recreational and higher | pilots. Of course, the instruction must be in an LSA that | the instructor is legal to give instruction in and the pilot | must be cat/class rated to fly the LSA he's receiving | instruction in. | | But the language is clear, a sport pilot instructor can | endorse for a sport pilot privilege. Whether that | endorsement can be extended beyond the sport pilot to a | higher class certificate is up to the FAA. | | I did speak to the FAA on the flight review issue about 6 | months ago. They told me at the time that the SPI can give | a FR to a PP and that it would satisfy the PP's requirement | for a FR and make him legal in all cat/class for which he's | rated. They also confirmed that a renewal of the SPI under | Supbart K would renew any the Subpart H instructor ratings | he held. | | A sport pilot instructor in a J3 Cub (sport class aircraft) | and endorse a sport pilot for a tailwheel, but whether it | can be extended to a private pilot operating privilege under | 61.31 has not been clearly explained. | | I agree - there's still some question there, but only | because it hasn't been asked much. So far, the FAA and the | AOPA seem to be giving consistent answers on this. If | there's anything definitive in writing, I haven't seen it. | | -- | Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. | | (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
#5
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The FAA writes rules and then when asked "what did you
intend" writes a legal opinion. Until the public asks the question, the rule is not fully formed. I think as a general policy, all citizens should exercise the maximum leeway and use every possible ambiguity to their advantage and make the government justify any restriction. "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote: | | Only the asked question get a ruling. | | Do you want to flesh out the point you are making here? | Perhaps just a bit? | -- | Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. | | (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
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