bflynn
Final Approach
First question - am I reading Mosaic right?
We know the range of aircraft eligible for sport pilots is changing and the FAA is doing away with the LSA definition in 1.1. This morning I was up early and started reading through MOSAIC to see what that meant for LSA Repairmen and LSA IAs, but I was finding it a little dense (or it's just me being dense at times). In doing away with the LSA definition, they're changing the range of aircraft that repairmen and IAs can work on. The training requirements are going to change, but it won't be a full 2 year part 147 course? It sounds like it will be the 120 hours the repairman already has to do plus additional training specific to the category of aircraft to work on. You won't need a full A&P? But what if the same aircraft is flown by non-sport pilots for non-sport activities?
Am I reading this right?
We know the range of aircraft eligible for sport pilots is changing and the FAA is doing away with the LSA definition in 1.1. This morning I was up early and started reading through MOSAIC to see what that meant for LSA Repairmen and LSA IAs, but I was finding it a little dense (or it's just me being dense at times). In doing away with the LSA definition, they're changing the range of aircraft that repairmen and IAs can work on. The training requirements are going to change, but it won't be a full 2 year part 147 course? It sounds like it will be the 120 hours the repairman already has to do plus additional training specific to the category of aircraft to work on. You won't need a full A&P? But what if the same aircraft is flown by non-sport pilots for non-sport activities?
Am I reading this right?