Flavius Renatus
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2012
- Messages
- 161
- Location
- Northwestern Illinois
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Flavius Renatus
The way I understand it, if you are already a PP, you'll be able to fly again without a Medical, if your last expired in the ten-year time frame."After the president signs the bill into law, the FAA will have up to one year to develop and issue regulations before the third class medical provisions become effective. But the 10-year reachback that will allow many pilots to fly without needing another FAA medical exam will take effect when the bill is signed by the president."
So what does this mean? If I have a medical already, can I fly on it forever as soon as Obama signs it or do I need to wait up to a year for the FAA to make rules?
The way I understand it, if you are already a PP, you'll be able to fly again without a Medical, if your last expired in the ten-year time frame.
If you are Sport, you'll be able to upgrade without a medical after the new rules are issued, or after ONE year from passage, if the FAA drops the ball.
If you are new, you can begin training after passage, without need of the Medical, but your ticket won't be issued until the FAA sets the rules..
Please, someone correct me if I have this wrong.
What if you have an SI? I have two more years of showing proof of no more kidney stones, and the next one is due end of September. Anyone have any idea?
precisely why I am no longer an AOPA member...Lots of good questions, with no answers yet.
Maybe, after AOPA is done congratulating itself, it will get around to telling us dues-paying members what it means to real people with real situations.
My Medical exam is scheduled for the end of August. It doesn't look like I can cancel it.
You do, unfortunately. Sport pilots and new pilots will still have to get a one-time 3rd class first before joining the legions of medical-less PPLs. The exception would be someone who went light sport after letting their 3rd class expire, sometime in the last 10 years.The way I understand it, if you are already a PP, you'll be able to fly again without a Medical, if your last expired in the ten-year time frame.
If you are Sport, you'll be able to upgrade without a medical after the new rules are issued, or after ONE year from passage, if the FAA drops the ball.
If you are new, you can begin training after passage, without need of the Medical, but your ticket won't be issued until the FAA sets the rules..
Please, someone correct me if I have this wrong.
What if you have an SI? I have two more years of showing proof of no more kidney stones, and the next one is due end of September. Anyone have any idea?
Kidney stones are not among the specifically listed conditions requiring an SI under PBOR2. So you could let your SI lapse next year and keep flying - assuming you can find a physician to sign off your every four year physical knowing you have kidney stones.What if you have an SI? I have two more years of showing proof of no more kidney stones, and the next one is due end of September. Anyone have any idea?
Still not going to hold my breath...
Well, look at the bright side. You won't need the anus exam for another four years.
OSA isn't one of those special conditions either. It looks like the answer is yes -- if you can get a doctor to sign you off.Anyone have a line in what this means for those with Sleep Apnea and Kidney Stones?
Am I about to be able to fly again finally ?
Anyone have info on the timeline for the Senate to do their thing on PBOR the Second?
It's the best part. Ask the doctor, if it's a woman, to press little harder next time.Whats all this anus talk?
I got my third class at a local AME, and he never asked to look at my butthole. He didn't even check my testicles. Never even took my pants off. The whole thing was actually pretty painless. Maybe I got lucky and got a good AME.
Can't say the same for my physical at MEPS when I was going to join the military. They checked both of those. (And a lot more.)
My 3rd class is already expired, and I looked up my original AME, and he moved across the country. I was planning on going to another AME to renew, but I might just wait and see how this 3rd class reform works out.
The have 1 year to implement the changes from the time the president signs it. I wonder how long they'll really take...
Oh, I can get a doctor to sign me off, no worries there.OSA isn't one of those special conditions either. It looks like the answer is yes -- if you can get a doctor to sign you off.
No one says that you can't get a 3rd class medical...I'm worried this whole medical reform might end up being a "careful what you wish for" kind of thing.
I mean my 3rd class cost me $75, was with a dr. that loves aviation, and is a pilot herself.
If I have to go to a regular dr. my deductible is $2000, so I'm going to end up paying way more for the visit, plus I have no idea if my dr. would even sign me off.
What if you have an SI? I have two more years of showing proof of no more kidney stones, and the next one is due end of September. Anyone have any idea?
Lots of good questions, with no answers yet.
Maybe, after AOPA is done congratulating itself, it will get around to telling us dues-paying members what it means to real people with real situations.
Who really knows what it really means? When it becomes law, it might be clearer.
Cheers
They have 1 year to implement the changes from the time the president signs it. I wonder how long they'll really take...
Who really knows what it really means? When it becomes law, it might be clearer.
Cheers
I'm worried this whole medical reform might end up being a "careful what you wish for" kind of thing.
I mean my 3rd class cost me $75, was with a dr. that loves aviation, and is a pilot herself.
If I have to go to a regular dr. my deductible is $2000, so I'm going to end up paying way more for the visit, plus I have no idea if my dr. would even sign me off.