Danos
Line Up and Wait
This one has LR Jet on it! Passed my checkride and have a bad case of sim poisoning. Can't wait to fly the real thing!
Congrats!This one has LR Jet on it! Passed my checkride and have a bad case of sim poisoning. Can't wait to fly the real thing!
Congratulations!
First Jet TR? Did they put some language on it restricting you from acting as PIC until you get some IOE?
PS - You Suck.
Love, Tim
Thanks Tim! First TR! It's was an SIC. I didn't qualify for the PIC because I have about 700 tt and need an ATP for 135. Maybe within the next 2 years unless I fly like Ted
Thanks Tim! First TR! It's was an SIC. I didn't qualify for the PIC because I have about 700 tt and need an ATP for 135. Maybe within the next 2 years unless I fly like Ted
§ 135.243 Pilot in command qualifications.
(a) No certificate holder may use a person, nor may any person serve, as pilot in command in passenger-carrying operations—
(1) Of a turbojet airplane, of an airplane having a passenger-seat configuration, excluding each crewmember seat, of 10 seats or more, or of a multiengine airplane in a commuter operation as defined in part 119 of this chapter, unless that person holds an airline transport pilot certificate with appropriate category and class ratings and, if required, an appropriate type rating for that airplane.
Correct - Travolta has the 707 type on his PPL.And heck... there's no requirement for an atp for a type rating at all. Folks have gotten learjet types with a private and instrument.
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No, you can do them in an approved simulator.
It's not just for the Lear and not just for SIC type ratings. You can get PIC type ratings exclusively in a simulator too. Sometimes the PIC type rating will have restrictions based on your experience, or lack of it, however.Is that just for the Lear?
It depends on the simulator. If it's a level C or D simulator the landings count just like landings in an airplane and you don't need to do any additional ones in the actual airplane.I know that if you want to get an SIC type in the 737, you do the training and checkride in the sim, but before the FAA will issue the type on your certificate, you must log at least one takeoff and landing in the actual aircraft.
It depends on the simulator. If it's a level C or D simulator the landings count just like landings in an airplane and you don't need to do any additional ones in the actual airplane.
I can't comment on that school but I can tell you that I have been issued three unrestricted jet PIC type ratings without ever landing the real airplane (I guess I did land the Lear before I ever went to school but not as a part of formal training).That's not what I have been told by the sim centers.
Here is one example - they use Level C and D sims:
http://www.skybluejetaviation.com/B737.html
Scroll down to the Graduatin and Course Completion section and you'll see what I am talking about. Other type rating schools have said the same thing.
I can't comment on that school but I can tell you that I have been issued two unrestricted jet PIC type ratings without ever landing the real airplane.That's not what I have been told by the sim centers.
Here is one example - they use Level C and D sims:
http://www.skybluejetaviation.com/B737.html
Scroll down to the Graduatin and Course Completion section and you'll see what I am talking about. Other type rating schools have said the same thing.
I can't comment on that school but I can tell you that I have been issued two unrestricted jet PIC type ratings without ever landing the real airplane.
No. I had no time in either of the aircraft at all. In fact I had never even been inside of them in flight.Did you have any SIC time in the aircraft before you went for the PIC type?
Mari is correct - it is the certification of the sim that determines what can be trained and checked and most type ratings are checked and issued with zero aircraft flight time. There is an exception with initial SIC applicants that request "SIC Privileges" added to their certificate for a particular type.
Read 61.55, very last paragraph.
(j) When an applicant for an initial second-in-command qualification for a particular type of aircraft receives all the training in a flight simulator, that applicant must satisfactorily complete one takeoff and one landing in an aircraft of the same type for which the qualification is sought. This requirement does not apply to an applicant who completes a proficiency check under part 121 or competency check under subpart K, part 91, part 125, or part 135 for the particular type of aircraft.
Edit: Sorry, forgot the most important part. Congrats Danos!!
That's as I undertand it, I wondered if they'd put the limitation language I'd mentioned above on it.My understanding was that Danos did get the type rating, not just SIC Privileges added to his commercial certificate as he said he passed his checkride and no check is required for SIC Privileges only. He is acting as SIC for his job, however as he does not meet PIC requirements for the company/operations.
This is what I remember too. There was a list of conditions which allowed you to avoid the limitation. This list was formerly part of 61.63 but I don't see it there anymore. Here is a link to an old copy of the FARs.When I was looking at getting PIC type rating in a Jet, I was told that because it would be my first TR in a transport airplane and it was only done in a sim, I'd get the PIC TR (no such thing as an SIC TR then) but I'd have a limitation that I couldn't serve as PIC in the airplane until I'd gotten 25 hours of supervised operating experience, at which time I'd take that documentation to a FSDO and they'd remove the restriction.
All follow-on type ratings could be done in a sim, however.