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#11
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Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider?
I had not seen that before. We get a few of visitors each year that already hold their US FAA Pvt Certificate based on their Foreign, (UK, AUS or Canada) certificate. BT wrote in message ... Hi Guys, Hopefully, you can help me get this figured out. I'm going on a trip to Florida next summer, and I'd like to fly a glider while I'm there (I kept seeing gorgeous Cu's from Mickey-Mouse-Land). I figured I would get checked out in a Grob 103 and then go have some fun in a Grob 102 or similar single-seater. According to the FAA website, I just need to send an application form along with a copy of my Canadian licence and medical for confirmation and approval, then a visit to the Rochester FSDO to get the licence. However, the Rochester FSDO says that I can't have a licence. The response is: According to our guidance, we will be unable to process your request. "Some foreign CAAs have issued pilot licenses that do not identify the grade of pilot license. In those instances, do not issue a U.S.pilot certificate. The holder of that kind of foreign pilot license does not meet ICAO standards for pilot certification." The Canadian glider certificate does not include the wording "private" or "commercial". Because of this we can not issue a US certificate based on your Canadian privileges. So, I said, "Well, I have a 'Private Pilot - Aeroplane' licence and a glider licence... can I please get a U.S. glider licence. Again, "No". I can get a U.S. power licence and fly N# power planes, but can't fly N# gliders. (I can take my Canadian registered glider to the U.S. and fly it on my Cdn licence, but not N# gliders). There HAS to be some simple way for me to fly solo in the U.S., but how? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! John |
#12
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http://www.tc.gc.ca/CivilAviation/ge...Conversion.htm I would suggest you contact your local TCCA office and talk to the licensing people. They will give you the info you require. |
#13
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On Nov 24, 7:24*pm, "BT" wrote:
Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider? I had not seen that before. We get a few of visitors each year that already hold their US FAA Pvt Certificate based on their Foreign, (UK, AUS or Canada) certificate. BT My glider certificate shows "Glider Pilot". My power certificate reads "Private Pilot - Aeroplane". My medical is valid for both, but for differing time periods. I think I'll contact Transport Canada about this. |
#14
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In message , BT
writes Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider? I had not seen that before. We get a few of visitors each year that already hold their US FAA Pvt Certificate based on their Foreign, (UK, AUS or Canada) certificate. Snip Since the commercial licence is a higher qualification I would have thought the common sense thing is to treat it as a Private Glider licence - but when did common sense have much to do with it? -- Surfer! Email to: ramwater at uk2 dot net |
#15
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Surfer! wrote:
In message , BT writes Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider? I had not seen that before. We get a few of visitors each year that already hold their US FAA Pvt Certificate based on their Foreign, (UK, AUS or Canada) certificate. Snip Since the commercial licence is a higher qualification I would have thought the common sense thing is to treat it as a Private Glider licence - but when did common sense have much to do with it? Sense(any kind) and aviation bureaucracy are generally strangers. |
#16
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After searching the FAA web site, this is what I came up with:
Airmen Certification: Verify the Authenticity of a Foreign License, Rating, or Medical Certification http://www.faa.gov/licenses_certific..._verification/ In this case, you are interrested in FAR 61.75. (see below) Private pilot certificate issued on the basis of a foreign pilot license. http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text...2.1.10&idno=14 From what I understand of the US system, you get a Private Pilot Licence with a Glider endorsement. I may be wrong but, my previous comment about contacting TCCA/Licencing still holds. |
#17
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BT wrote:
Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider? I had not seen that before. In the most countries of this world, the glider pilot license does not say "private glider" or "commercial glider", because in most countries of this world, there is simply no such thing. There's a glider pilot license, and that's it. A fully ICAO compliant glider license, by the way. So I think you should try and get some paper by the Canadian authorities confirming that your licence is ICAO compliant. |
#18
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On Nov 27, 10:58*am, John Smith wrote:
BT wrote: Your Canadian certificate does not say Private Glider or Commercial Glider? I had not seen that before. In the most countries of this world, the glider pilot license does not say "private glider" or "commercial glider", because in most countries of this world, there is simply no such thing. There's a glider pilot license, and that's it. A fully ICAO compliant glider license, by the way.. So I think you should try and get some paper by the Canadian authorities confirming that your licence is ICAO compliant. Canada has recognized that we're not completely ICAO compliant in a couple of areas, and has begun the process of fixing that at a faster- than-expected-for-beaurocracy speed. On 1 January, you should be able to apply at http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/ge...el/changes.htm for a new-style Canadian licence, where your GPL and PPL will be combined in to a single document that should satisfy the FAA's inspectors. If you didn't have the PPL, and just a GPL, you'd have to wait until 2010 to apply for the new document. Cheers, Rob |
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