At the two glider-ports I’ve been to, I’ve never seen any such thing.I think most trainers meet the light sport rule
The potential catch is that to solo in the glider, the private pilot will have to have a current BFR in an airplane. That could be an issue if you're currently not flying at all.
I never understood this what’s the rationale?The potential catch is that to solo in the glider, the private pilot will have to have a current BFR in an airplane.
Aircraft certificate types and Sport Pilot privileges are two (semi) unrelated things.The two-seat trainers we have are certificated as “Glider”. Never seen or heard of any category of aircraft certification for “Light Sport Glider”
The potential catch is that to solo in the glider, the private pilot will have to have a current BFR in an airplane.
Sport Pilot is different. For initial sport pilot license, yes there are minimum hours required, but they are not 20. Sport pilot glider is 10 hrs, with 8 dual & 2 solo. However, for an additional category or class of light-sport, it requires receiving instruction on applicable areas of knowledge and areas of operation. It is up to the instructor to decide when the student is proficient, regardless of hours, and no solo time required. After the student passes the proficiency check with a second CFI, it is just a logbook entry, similar to getting an endorsement for tailwheel transition or high performance with a standard PPL.Not True as I read the FAR's that you can get a Sport Pilot Glider rating without solo time....
No idea if there is any rationale at all, I think it's merely a consequence of the fact that a certificated pilot must have a current BFR in order to act as PIC in any aircraft, and they didn't create an excepted for solo training in a new category/class. And I can tell you from experience that many CFIs and even some DPEs are not aware of this. Or maybe they ignore it because it doesn't make any sense.I never understood this what’s the rationale?
Do you hold a sport pilot certificate? If not, look at 61.303 for the pilot certificate you have, then go to 61.321. Either way, I would be surprised, but not shocked, if an instructor would endorse you without at least some solo time.Sport Pilot is different. For initial sport pilot license, yes there are minimum hours required, but they are not 20. Sport pilot glider is 10 hrs, with 8 dual & 2 solo. However, for an additional category or class of light-sport, it requires receiving instruction on applicable areas of knowledge and areas of operation. It is up to the instructor to decide when the student is proficient, regardless of hours, and no solo time required. After the student passes the proficiency check with a second CFI, it is just a logbook entry, similar to getting an endorsement for tailwheel transition or high performance with a standard PPL.
61.321 How do I obtain privileges to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft? If you hold a sport pilot certificate and seek to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft, you must— (a) Receive a logbook endorsement from the authorized instructor who trained you on the applicable aeronautical knowledge areas specified in §61.309 and areas of operation specified in §61.311. The endorsement certifies you have met the aeronautical knowledge and flight proficiency requirements for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek; (b) Successfully complete a proficiency check from an authorized instructor other than the instructor who trained you on the aeronautical knowledge areas and areas of operation specified in §§61.309 and 61.311 for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek:
But, the sensible thing would be for the O.P. to get a flight review in a 172 then just get the private glider ticket.
Why wouldn't the second instructor charge almost as much as a checkride? Are there so many more of them that they can't?For a ppl power to add sport pilot glider privileges rather than go the ppl glider route, you save the cost and hassle of getting a checkride from an FAA DPE/glider. Since DPEs have raised the cost of their checkrides so much, you can save a chunk of change by just getting the sport pilot glider add on and paying the instructors (need at least two, one for the training and one for the endorcement "checkride.")
You do you, but if you have a commercial cert, it seems like a waste not to just do the glider add-on. And if you get current in airplanes and can tow, you'd be very in demand at the glider port and not at all bored.It would be an inefficient use of resources to use an airplane for a BFR that I will never ever fly, when there is a better way. I would rather use the resources to obtain additional skills. There is no need for me to get a private glider certificate when light sport glider is available. If I can find somebody who does it, the following time a BFR is due, I would do a LTA- balloon light sport. I did the commercial pilot thing already and am done with it. From now on, it is just for personal enjoyment and fulfillment. My dad was a pilot, so my childhood was spent in and around single engine airplanes. When I was old enough to get a license, fixed wing seemed so ordinary. The excitement level was about the same as getting a driver's license, so I went the ppl rotorcraft route first before fixed wing.
"Student pilots", once they become certificated, lose the "Student" in front of pilot. To act as PIC for a flight, you either are a student pilot who has been endorced for solo, or a pilot with a current flight review and endorcement for soloing the glider. Since a private pilot can no longer call himself a student even though he's training for another category of aircraft, he has to have a current flight review in one of whatever he is certified to fly to act as PIC. It works similar for a glider pilot wanting to add SEL to his certificate. He'd need to get a flight review in glider and additionally, he'd have to get a medical, before he could be legal to solo a SEL. The requirement to have a current FR is consistent if you read the regulations as they are currently written. Good luck getting the FAA to change the regulations to make it easier on pilots to forgo getting a flight review.No idea if there is any rationale at all. And I can tell you from experience that many CFIs and even some DPEs are not aware of this. Or maybe they ignore it because it doesn't make any sense.
Most instructors charge their standard rate for providing instruction to give the endorcement check. DPEs do have a lot of overhead that their checkride fee has to cover, at least that's the partial reason they charge so much. DPEs have to keep their FSDO overlords happy as their DPE ticket rides on whims of their FSDO. The aggravation that entails may also justify "some" of their fee.Why wouldn't the second instructor charge almost as much as a checkride? Are there so many more of them that they can't?
Do you hold a sport pilot certificate? If not, look at 61.303 for the pilot certificate you have, then go to 61.321. Either way, I would be surprised, but not shocked, if an instructor would endorse you without at least some solo time.
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Sport Pilot is different. For initial sport pilot license, yes there are minimum hours required, but they are not 20. Sport pilot glider is 10 hrs, with 8 dual & 2 solo. However, for an additional category or class of light-sport, it requires receiving instruction on applicable areas of knowledge and areas of operation. It is up to the instructor to decide when the student is proficient, regardless of hours, and no solo time required. After the student passes the proficiency check with a second CFI, it is just a logbook entry, similar to getting an endorsement for tailwheel transition or high performance with a standard PPL.
61.321 How do I obtain privileges to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft? If you hold a sport pilot certificate and seek to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft, you must— (a) Receive a logbook endorsement from the authorized instructor who trained you on the applicable aeronautical knowledge areas specified in §61.309 and areas of operation specified in §61.311. The endorsement certifies you have met the aeronautical knowledge and flight proficiency requirements for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek; (b) Successfully complete a proficiency check from an authorized instructor other than the instructor who trained you on the aeronautical knowledge areas and areas of operation specified in §§61.309 and 61.311 for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek:
FAA to change the regulations to make it easier on pilots to forgo getting a flight review.
Don't need an LSA for a flight review even if you don't have any medical. You need a medical to act as PIC in a not-LSA but not to get instruction.if you have access to a light-sport eligible airplane or qualify for basic med, why not just get a BFR
I understand the regs. But understanding the reg and the rationale for it are two different things. And frankly I don't think it was intentional."Student pilots", once they become certificated, lose the "Student" in front of pilot. To act as PIC for a flight, you either are a student pilot who has been endorced for solo, or a pilot with a current flight review and endorcement for soloing the glider. Since a private pilot can no longer call himself a student even though he's training for another category of aircraft, he has to have a current flight review in one of whatever he is certified to fly to act as PIC. It works similar for a glider pilot wanting to add SEL to his certificate. He'd need to get a flight review in glider and additionally, he'd have to get a medical, before he could be legal to solo a SEL. The requirement to have a current FR is consistent if you read the regulations as they are currently written. Good luck getting the FAA to change the regulations to make it easier on pilots to forgo getting a flight review.
The article says Stephen Williams got an opinion from the FAA on this. I can't find a chief counsel letter, but maybe he just asked his local FSDO.Okay, so I need your opinions here. Following is some excerpts from the article I linked in #5 above. I am trying to either prove it or debunk it. Any FAA decisions that address this, or applicable FARs that contradict his opinion?
So, what are your options if you are an out-of-currency powered pilot who is ready to solo in the glider? You have two options: get a flight review in a category/class aircraft that you are rated in, like a 172 or Warrior, which may add time and expense to your glider pursuit, or the second option of which CSA’s Stephen Williams took advantage this past summer to get his glider certificate without having to resort to a flight review in something he will never fly….
Sport Pilot Option
Several years ago, the FAA created the sport pilot certificate as a way to enable pilots who wanted to fly simpler aircraft to get their license without a lot of the burden that private pilots have to go through. Consequently, there are more restrictions on sport pilots and the aircraft they can fly.
Sport Pilots are covered by Subpart J of Part 61.For pilots who are already certificated at a higher level (i.e.; Private, Commercial), the aeronautical experience is listed the table in Part 61.303 and 61.321. So Stephen, for example, has a commercial certificate with airplane single and multi engine land ratings.To get a sport pilot certificate with a glider category, we start at Part 61.303 – and look at the section for those who hold at least a private pilot certificate but not a rating for the category and class of light sport you wish to operate (i.e. glider):
What the FAA does here is to give you credit for being a certificated pilot already at a level higher than Sport Pilot. The implication of that is that by meeting the requirements of Part 61.321 for category and class endorsements at the sport pilot level, a transitioning pilot can meet the aeronautical experience requirements necessary for exercising sport pilot privileges without a solo flight requirement.
Not True as I read the FAR's that you can get a Sport Pilot Glider rating without solo time....
(c) Glider category privileges, and you have logged 20 hours flight time in a heavier-than-air aircraft, (1) 3 hours of flight time in a glider, including five flights in a glider while receiving flight training from an authorized instructor and at least 1 hour of solo flight training in the areas of operation listed in § 61.311, (i) Three solo launches and landings, and (ii) at least 3 training flights with an authorized instructor on those areas of operation specified in § 61.311 in preparation for the practical test within the preceding 2 calendar months from the month of the test.
Thank you. I checked out his website, but he teaches in a motor glider.Glider training in LSA:
https://aircraftking.com/randvollmer/
How you do 3 solo launches and landings without flying solo?
What exactly are you not seeing in the regulations? Here is the reg for an additional category or class privileges at the Sport Pilot level…I see what the NAFI document says, but I don't see in the FAA regs stated that this is the case. OTOH, they do not say that one needs to meet the aeronautical experience requirements either.
§ 61.321 How do I obtain privileges to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft?
If you hold a sport pilot certificate and seek to operate an additional category or class of light-sport aircraft, you must -
(a) Receive a logbook endorsement from the authorized instructor who trained you on the applicable aeronautical knowledge areas specified in § 61.309 and areas of operation specified in § 61.311. The endorsement certifies you have met the aeronautical knowledge and flight proficiency requirements for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek;
(b) Successfully complete a proficiency check from an authorized instructor other than the instructor who trained you on the aeronautical knowledge areas and areas of operation specified in §§ 61.309 and 61.311 for the additional light-sport aircraft privilege you seek;
(c) Complete an application for those privileges on a form and in a manner acceptable to the FAA and present this application to the authorized instructor who conducted the proficiency check specified in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(d) Receive a logbook endorsement from the instructor who conducted the proficiency check specified in paragraph (b)of this section certifying you are proficient in the applicable areas of operation and aeronautical knowledge areas, and that you are authorized for the additional category and class light-sport aircraft privilege.
Soar Paso in Paso Robles, California offers this 7 days a weekAnybody know where light sport glider instruction is available? I am specifically looking for transitioning with an existing PPL or above. Somewhere in the USA.
Do you offer self launch endorsements?Soar Paso in Paso Robles, California offers this 7 days a week
Yes! We are exclusively self-launch for gliders.Do you offer self launch endorsements?
Interesting... So what would be the requirements of the checkride? Would I need to conduct the night xc solos, and would the DPE be able to act as PIC because I don't have a medical? I'm essentially asking if it is possible for someone to obtain a PPL-airplane, without a medical. Obviously they wouldn't be able to exercise PPL-airplane privledges since a medical is requried.If you have currently a sport pilot certificate and get a private in gliders, you surrender your SP certificate and get a PP with a glider rating. You can fly gliders (LSA or not) as a PP, and you still have the airplane endorsement so you can still exercise SP privileges in LSA airplanes. If you want to fly heavier or faster airplanes as a PP, you need to take a checkride to add the PP rating to your certificate.
No.I'm essentially asking if it is possible for someone to obtain a PPL-airplane, without a medical.