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I've been asked to investigate, on behalf of some applicants to my
flying club, the procedure to take a non-US pilot certificate to a US one. I got some good info from AOPA, but if there's anybody who's actually been through the process and would be willing to share the experience, I'd appreciate hearing from you. |
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I'm doing it right now. Applicant holds the equivalent of PPL from the JAA.
He's a 30 hour VFR only pilot. Spoke with two local DPEs. Both said to prep him to the PPL PTS, as that's what they have to test him to. No shortcuts. Oral and flight test as if he was a low-time student pilot applying for his first ticket. Simple. No muss, no fuss. Pat Brown CFII "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... I've been asked to investigate, on behalf of some applicants to my flying club, the procedure to take a non-US pilot certificate to a US one. I got some good info from AOPA, but if there's anybody who's actually been through the process and would be willing to share the experience, I'd appreciate hearing from you. |
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Oops....
TYPO. He's a 300 hour PPL!!! Sorry. PB "Magic Fingers" wrote in message ... I'm doing it right now. Applicant holds the equivalent of PPL from the JAA. He's a 30 hour VFR only pilot. Spoke with two local DPEs. Both said to prep him to the PPL PTS, as that's what they have to test him to. No shortcuts. Oral and flight test as if he was a low-time student pilot applying for his first ticket. Simple. No muss, no fuss. Pat Brown CFII "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... I've been asked to investigate, on behalf of some applicants to my flying club, the procedure to take a non-US pilot certificate to a US one. I got some good info from AOPA, but if there's anybody who's actually been through the process and would be willing to share the experience, I'd appreciate hearing from you. |
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Roy,
the procedure to take a non-US pilot certificate to a US one. Well, is you aim a US certificate based on a valid foreign certificate or do you want to end up with a full US certificate independent of the foreign license? The FAA website spells out the details, but basically for the former, you need to apply to the FAA in advance, which will check if you hold a valid foreign certificate. After that, go to an FSDO and collect the US certificate. After that, do a flight review and you're good to go. For the latter, you need to apply for training with the TSA first. Then, you basically need to go through the full training and all tests - except that all training received for your foreign certificate counts. In essence, you might end up needing to do only the 3 hours required in preparation for the test. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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In article ,
Thomas Borchert wrote: Roy, the procedure to take a non-US pilot certificate to a US one. Well, is you aim a US certificate based on a valid foreign certificate or do you want to end up with a full US certificate independent of the foreign license? I don't know exactly. The former sounds simpler. Are there advantages to the latter? |
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Roy,
The former sounds simpler. Are there advantages to the latter? It IS simpler. WAY simpler. And I would recommend to go that way for occasional flying in the US. Mind you, the certificate holder will have to do a full flight review, often forgotten by FBOs renting to foreigners. If s/he is not familiar with US airspace, regulations and procedures (radio work, above all), and the CFI giving the review is halfway responsible, this will take more than an hour ground school and an hour in the air. The advantage to the "true" US certificate is that you can build ratings and new certificates according to US standards on it. Also, should your underlying foreign license become invalid for some reason, the US certificate based on it would become invalid, too. One very important possibility for that scenario lies in the extremely strict medical requirements for private pilots in some European countries, e.g. Germany. It's quite easy for a pilot to have his German medical declined on a condition that would be perfectly ok in the US. Allowable uncorrected vision, for example, is limited in Germany, it isn't in the US. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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Thomas Borchert wrote:
The advantage to the "true" US certificate is that you can build ratings ok, may be this one changed, but I was able at the time to add the US Instrument Rating on my private certificate based on a foreign license. the US certificate based on it would become invalid, too. One very important possibility for that scenario lies in the extremely strict medical requirements for private pilots in some European countries, e.g. Germany. It's quite easy for a pilot to have his German medical declined on a condition that would be perfectly ok in the US. Allowable uncorrected vision, for example, is limited in Germany, it isn't in the US. indeed. but some foreign licenses were valid -- as far as 61.75 was concerned -- indefinitely, regardless of you having the corresponding foreign medical (and/or maintained the foreign currency requirements); that was the case with the old British PPL(A). --Sylvain |
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Roy Smith wrote:
Well, is you aim a US certificate based on a valid foreign certificate or do you want to end up with a full US certificate independent of the foreign license? I don't know exactly. The former sounds simpler. Are there advantages to the latter? yes and no. it depends on the country that issued the license upon which the US certificate is based; for instance, I got my first US certificate under 61.75 based on the old style (pre-JAR) British PPL(A); in this case, it was actually more advantageous for me to do so than to get a 'real' FAA certificate; for one thing, the British PPL(A) did not expire (just like the US certificate, i.e., the piece of paper does not expire); and that's important, because 61.75 says that the US certificate is valid as long as the foreign license upon which it is based remains valid (unless it is explicitly revoked or surrendered); Moreover, at the time, my British Class-III medical was valid 5 years :-) -- so all in all, it was simpler at the time to stick with my 61.75 based certificate nowadays however, it is my understanding that the new JAR licenses do have an expiration date on it (I haven't bothered yet to exchange my British PPL(A) for one -- but I understand that folks with a German PPL also had the same problem, i.e., expiration date on the license); and it becomes a pain in the neck since you have to keep not just one, but two civil aviation authorities happy. Now, if someone already has a foreign private license; I reckon the best bet would be to i) apply for a US certificate based on the foreign license under 61.75, even though it has become more complicated and requires that the country of origin certifies your credentials; and ii) prepare for the commercial ticket; i.e., if you must prepare for a written exam and checkride, might as well go for the commercial for just a little bit -- not that much -- more effort. that's what I did actually (I still keep my private certificate based on the foreign license because it still has my glider rating on it; I should eventually go spend a couple of weeks at a place like Minden and get the commercial and be done with it :-) --Sylvain |
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