SkyHog
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Everything Offends Me
In a multiengine airplane? If so, can it also be done after getting the PPL, or only as a student pilot?
I understand ATP teaches the commercial ticket in multiengine. You can be endorsed for solo in multiengine. But, you show up to them with a private pilot certificate already in hand.In a multiengine airplane? If so, can it also be done after getting the PPL, or only as a student pilot?
No a CFI cannot do that, unless he's a CFI-MEI.In a multiengine airplane? If so, can it also be done after getting the PPL, or only as a student pilot?
No a CFI cannot do that, unless he's a CFI-MEI.
Otherwise the questions are both yes, and yes. SOME people with means learn to fly in Multis. We (pretty much the CFI community as a whole) discourage piling on the tasks in the initial learning stages. It goes MUCH slower. Heck you can do your primary in a 737 if you have the $$s and time.
I understand the multiengine part but I've always wondered how you could get a private in a two pilot airplane like the ones named in the previous posts (Lear 24 and 737). How could you solo either one of those?It's not the same endorsement as Student Pilots get (61.31(d) vs 61.89(n)(1)), but yes, a CFI-AME can endorse a PP-ASEL for solo in a multiengine airplane.
Hmmmn. The way it's done USN style is you sit in the command seat, the Instructor is in the right seat, the check airman runs the engineer's panel. That's how you qualify in an E188.I understand the multiengine part but I've always wondered how you could get a private in a two pilot airplane like the ones named in the previous posts (Lear 24 and 737). How could you solo either one of those?
How do you meet the solo hour requirement for a private then when solo means nobody else in the aircraft.In those you don't solo. The 2-IC is the CFI. You do this right through to the checkride where the inspector sits in the jumpseat.
This is how you qualify in the E188 which is a 3-crew a/c.
I doubt military training has such minimum requirements. The way I understand it, you meet certain criteria at a given point or you become close to toast. Fail a second attempt and you are toast.How do you meet the solo hour requirement for a private then when solo means nobody else in the aircraft.
How do you meet the solo hour requirement for a private then when solo means nobody else in the aircraft.
I wasn't talking about military training which may have a whole different set of rules.I doubt military training has such minimum requirements. The way I understand it, you meet certain criteria at a given point or you become close to toast. Fail a second attempt and you are toast.
Hmmn. You're literally correct.I wasn't talking about military training which may have a whole different set of rules.
You occasionally hear people say that you can get your private in a Lear or some other two-pilot aircraft. I agree that you can take the private checkride in a Lear, but you need to complete the solo requirements in some airplane that you can fly solo. You cannot solo a Lear and if there is another pilot on board you are not solo.
That was something I was thinking about earlier when I was brainstorming. Unfortunately, I was also getting fried on some other issues I was dealing with so my post was during episodes of being on hold.You occasionally hear people say that you can get your private in a Lear or some other two-pilot aircraft. I agree that you can take the private checkride in a Lear, but you need to complete the solo requirements in some airplane that you can fly solo. You cannot solo a Lear and if there is another pilot on board you are not solo.
OK, I can go with that.Let me revise my ad hominem. "You can get your pvt asel in a C550 if you have the $$s and cahones. It's just pretty stupid to do so"