If sounds like you and
@denverpilot are saying the Commercial is supposed to be another rung up that ladder, climbing a little higher away from the low-water mark. That makes sense, I just think it misses the mark.
So honest question, you’re “King for a Day”. What maneuvers would you replace the current ones with for a freshly minted Commercial certificate?
Remember this pilot is going to go do jumper dumping, banner towing, glider towing, SIC in a 135 operation (where they have their own approved rules and training over and above the Certificate) or any of the “usual” 250 hour fresh Commercial jobs out there.
What skill set would you recommend that would save Commerical pilot’s lives and increase safety over the current requirements?
Personally I’d say to bring back mandatory spin training myself, but the FAA is cow-towing to the fact that many of the aircraft that will be used under the new TAA rule and not be old complex aircraft, aren’t certified for spins.
The pipeline patrol industry (a common starting point for a freshly minted Commercial) has seen a number of stall/spin fatalities in the last decade. Enough to call it a pattern, IMHO.
As relates to the TAA thing, I haven’t even seen a standard of what the pilot needs to show they learned from operating a TAA yet, either. Do they need to show they can properly dial in a localizer back course approach with a hold to start it, into their shiny new Whiz Bang 8000 in the panel and couple it to the autopilot?
They had to come up with something that was flyable in the majority of aircraft out there that showed a minimum demonstrated pilot skill.
Focusing only on those maneuvers is also a mistake since the oral and general observation by the DPE throughout the ride is supposed to assess a demeanor and approach and attitude toward flying “professionally” versus flying for “recreation” so to speak. That’s happening concurrently with the maneuvers, you just don’t see it spelled out completely, but the DPE is looking to see if you’re taking the whole thing seriously enough to be entrusted with stranger’s lives. Well, the good ones are, anyway.
But I’m interested. What maneuvers would you have them test, since in your opinion, these are deficient in some way, or as you say, this standard, “misses the mark”?
It’s actually a difficult question. I’ve thought about it myself.
And remember, plenty of people still flunk the Commercial ride.
Just for openness, I did, but that had to do with me deciding to not be able to land my own freaking airplane I have hundreds of hours in that day. Ha. Passed everything else, but made a landing I haven’t seen the likes of since I was a Private trainee. Was so funny. Examiner says, “You know I can’t accept that...” I’m laughing so hard on the go-around I can barely answer back, “Neither can I!”
But plenty of people fail it due to flat out lack of skill or preparedness, whatever you want to call it, besides just having a one day brain fart like I did.
So where your instructor properly prepped you and made sure your skill set easily passed that list of items, some people do actually struggle. And fail. And rightly so.
Look above in the thread where people here almost got to the point of complaining that SINGLE instrument approach is needed engine-out in the multi-Commerical ride. Shouldn’t a single engine approach be a near no-brainer by the time someone is applying to carry passengers who they don’t know, around in IMC? That shouldn’t be difficult at all. But people whine about how hard it is.
Side-note both of my Commerical rides had weirness. The SE add on (I did the multi first) was the landing stupidity I mentioned above.
On the multi we were set up for the single engine ILS and told the controllers we needed a full stop out of it and 300’ AGL the tower controller didn’t get the message from approach or forgot about it and told us to break it off and head southeast. Hahahahaha. I tried to get a word in to request the full stop and couldn’t so I asked the examiner for the right engine back. Haha. He agreed...
**** happens. But my Commercial rides were both weird.
Anyway, what maneuvers would you want them to test, remembering that once the candidate passes they’re doing the few non-135 and non-121 commercial flying jobs out there. Something specific you’d like to see FAA test for?