Reading some of the medical threads around here I wonder if many people are being pushed to LSAs because they don't want to try for a medical if they have even some small issues in their past. I don't know if this is because the medical process has become stricter or people have become more fearful of it. I remember years ago it seemed like pretty much a given that you could pass an FAA medical as long as you were warm and breathing. There were always those disqualifying conditions like diabetes but it seemed like the attitude was that most people could pass with no problem if they were generally healthy.
If this is the case I can see that LSAs will hold their value better than non-LSAs and that will be the growing segment in the near future.
The medical system has become Russian Roulette. The "self certification" thing will disappear when enough people "self certify" themselves into terra firma and the insurance companies start requiring "FAA Medical or Equivalent" to insure LSAs. And the "equivalent" will be their docs, and their rules. Just like life insurance. (It'll happen. Just need to see them lose enough money on medical-related crashes and it'll happen.)
Dr. Bruce tells everyone to make sure their health is top-priority and then worry about the medical, but the vast majority of us don't have AMEs that pay as much attention nor have as much access to the FAA's "mind-set" as Dr. Bruce. They don't know the magic words to keep from helping you pull the trigger on that 6-shooter with one round in the cylinder.
Most of the AMEs around here seem to get their real income from pee-testing truckers for CDL medicals, to be brutally honest. Most have signs up for that out front. Those that don't are older and well-established and have a large pilot clientele... but... they still don't always seem to know what to say to the FAA.
Strangely the rules changes to make medicals years longer for those few of us under 40, didn't drive any of them out of business due to lack of customers, which says something about the age of the pilot population, I suppose.
My AME kept sending me reminders to come in and get one, when my 3rd class got "stretched" by the new rules... (Okay actually it's a 2nd Class, but the reminders kept coming well into the 3rd Class years.)
Doesn't have me exactly excited about his ability to be detailed, if he can't put a new renewal date in his reminder database based on reported pilot age. Obviously it's just a dumb mail merge, but it makes me think, "Sloppy. Real sloppy, Doc."
I see and talk to a lot of older pilots who are walking around on pins and needles trying to pick that "just right time" to stop flying regular airplanes and start flying LSAs... that's really really busted... and it's not the self-certification side that's busted. Like I said, that'll "self-regulate" if it costs the insurance companies real coin. It's the other side that's busted.
I probably have avoided a couple of Family Doc visits that should have taken place to get an antibiotic or something equally begnign because with the long timeframes on a 3rd Class... you sit there and wonder... "Did I write EVERY visit I had in all these years down?"... Wondering if some paper pusher at the FAA will cross-reference your form with some medical insurance database and say, "AH HA... He had the sniffles in 1998!"
I know that's not REALLY how it works, but that's how it FEELS to a lot of pilots. Most find the entire process is scary, sometimes un-fair, and even degrading... does the FAA really need to know I had the sniffles two years ago, for crying out loud?
Yes, if I have chronic sniffles, even I'm smart enough to figure out they might be interested in that... but Doctors are in love with paperwork, and when they move into Government, they're in hog heaven.
My wife's a nurse (nowadays her title is "Assistant Director of Nursing" actually... and I need more digits than I have on my fingers and toes to count the number of times she's caught Doctors screwing up paperwork in ways that would HARM patients... let alone just get it right for insurance or other reasons. Color me skeptical that AME's get everything they send to the FAA right... and again... your AME is capable of pulling that trigger by accident and you get to see if the FAA gun goes off and you're "dead".
There's probably hundreds of thousands of folks in any major city who couldn't hold an FAA medical because they could become suddenly incapacitated at the controls of an aircraft... who're driving on the same roads that you did to go to work today. Again, it's not the self-certification process that's broken so much that it won't fix itself...
Similar to Experimental aircraft and avionics... FAA has made themselves the agency everyone wants to avoid completely, and then gave the loopholes to do it. Kinda weird, really.
Ranted a bit there. Sorry.