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What are the requirements needed to be a pilot with color deficiency ? Is there any hope to be a search and rescue pilot ( plane or helicopter) ?
What are the requirements needed to be a pilot with color deficiency ? Is there any hope to be a search and rescue pilot ( plane or helicopter) ?
What are the requirements needed to be a pilot with color deficiency ? Is there any hope to be a search and rescue pilot ( plane or helicopter) ?
This ruling restricts me from flying at night, for reasons only a bureaucrat can fathom.
If you are truly color deficient, no, there is no way you can be safe not being able to distinguish red from green from white light. That said, if all you have is trouble with the the Ichi Hara test, there are other tests such as the Farnsworth Lantern test and then there is a SODA test you can do with the feds on the field and the tower flashes lights and you call out the color.What are the requirements needed to be a pilot with color deficiency ? Is there any hope to be a search and rescue pilot ( plane or helicopter) ?
I don't think you can get a PPL with color blindness sans special issuance, and I really can't see the conditions under which they'd give you one. You can go earn a Sport Pilot license, along with it's limitations. However, I don't think you will be flying search and rescue missions in any official capacity.
I'm guessing that someone with red-green color blindness might have trouble identifying what other traffic is doing by their position lights?
I have a buddy who is red-green color blind. He got a special issuance. It just took a ride with an examiner. He has no night restrictions and a Class 3 medical.
I don't know if higher grades of medical would allow color blindness.
For WWII bomber pilots forming up at night for another thousand-plane raid to Berlin, this makes sense.
Sadly, I was born too late to participate.
After flying for 18 years, I was declared to be "color deficient" by an AME with poor equipment and worse judgement. This ruling restricts me from flying at night, for reasons only a bureaucrat can fathom.
A Commercial Pilot (CP) certificate comes with many different possible ratings, ranging from Airplane-Single Engine Land to Rotorcraft-Helicopter to Lighter Than Air Balloon. To get paid to fly, you must have a CP certificate with the appropriate rating for the aircraft you're flying. So, the CP certificate you need to get paid to fly an airplane isn't exactly the same as the CP you need to get paid to fly a helicopter, but it's close.Thank you for all of the information. Do you need the same commercial license for a helicopter?
You've got a couple of years before you can really get going on flight training, so there's time to work this out. Also, you keep mentioning SAR work -- are you planning to go in the military or other government agency like a sheriff's department?I want to do more than just be a sport pilot. I'm only fourteen but people keep telling me I won't be able to fly for sar, and I don't want to search from the ground.
Well, you're not going to be flying for a living if you can't pass the color test either in the doctor's office or the alternative practical test method. Try to find a flight instructor familiar with the special test protocol and see if you can pass. That will help you make appropriate plans.I don't think the military is what i want to do. My 1st dream was k-9 police as I have a czech border control shepard that my mom trained. Then I started flight simulators, joined young eagles, and am going to my 3rd air academy this summer. There was a police search by my house with helicopters and I know that is what I want to do, and fly planes.
I don't think the military is what i want to do. My 1st dream was k-9 police as I have a czech border control shepard that my mom trained. Then I started flight simulators, joined young eagles, and am going to my 3rd air academy this summer. There was a police search by my house with helicopters and I know that is what I want to do, and fly planes.
See post #21. The practical answer is, "no".Now I'm really confused. I know I can't see any color plates. I don't know about a light test on the runway. What if I don't pass any test, can I fly during the day as a search pilot? Can I use a colored contact or glasses to help me? My grandpa used them because he was a colorblind electrician. Some people tell me I can practice light colors and pass,and then I'm told I don't have a chance. Am I right that I can get a pilot certificate at some level? But I probably can't be anything more.
Like others have said, it depends on how colorblind you are so it would be good for you to consult an eye doctor. I know someone who has a SODA for a first class medical. I flew with him for a number of years before I even knew he was colorblind. He said he took the light gun test as a student and has not had to do anything else since then.Some people tell me I can practice light colors and pass,and then I'm told I don't have a chance.
Just out of curiosity, can you tell the difference between a red and green traffic signal?
Then do as I said above -- find a flight instructor who knows the routine and find out.I don't know about a light test on the runway.
I'm a deuteranope. I live by Peoria and I asked my mom if I know you, she said you tested my color for oshcosh. I know I can learn this.
This kid doesn't have to travel all the way to Peoria for that. Any local flight instructor who knows the drill can administer an evaluation to see if you can tell the red light from the green and read a sectional chart.Ok, so lets make this simple, hook up with Dr Bruce to set up for a SODA, you pass or fail on merit.
In post #32 he says he lives near Peoria.This kid doesn't have to travel all the way to Peoria for that. Any local flight instructor who knows the drill can administer an evaluation to see if you can tell the red light from the green and read a sectional chart.
Great!In post #32 he says he lives near Peoria.
Great!
Young man -- go to the web site below and call Dr. Chien for an evaluation appointment. Then you'll know, and until then, you won't.
http://home.comcast.net/~bbchien/site/
Ooh. I have some recollecton of a call from a mom about 8 months ago about this topic.....I'm a deuteranope. Iv been on line all night talking to my friends,pilots from the air academy that have flown with me. He is also a pilot for delta. He told me his friend is a delta pilot and got around it with practice. I'm looking at all the color tests and I can see some. He is going to help me. I can see stop lights. I have learned to tell differences that most never have too. I have been made fun of for years. I wrote a book for young authors and won first place called do you see what I see. No one sees what I see but I can learn it. I see color it's just a lot the same. My mom worked with me at 4 with an opthamologist out of chicago because I was having problems in preschool. I have been worked with a lot. My mom helps me learn little differences. I live by Peoria and I asked my mom if I know you, she said you tested my color for oshcosh. I know I can learn this.