captainiris
Filing Flight Plan
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- Feb 7, 2017
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captainiris
Hi, What is the best site for online courses to use? I want to do all licenses: private, instrument and commercial.Thanks!
Yes. Thank you!Online how, as in study courses? I used Sporty's.
I have a private license that base on my foreigner license with few hundreds hours. In order to get a commercial license down the road I need to get US license. So I need to start all over again which mean to focus more on the written course and exam and some flight hours.instrument is a rating.
are you planning to train at a local flight school or a college/flying course?
Because a flying course will come with the course standard that the scholl uses (gliem/jepp/asa etc).
good luck.
Hi, What is the best site for online courses to use? I want to do all licenses: private, instrument and commercial.Thanks!
Thank you so much for looking into it !!!I skimmed through the FAR's listed in links webpage and it seems that as long as you are from a EASA (Europe) country, you can transfer all your certs/ratings over to USA license (from how I see it anyway). PPL IRA COMM ATP are all included.
I THINK you would get your private under "foreign based" limitation, and the rest would be "normal" USA issue since your now training in the states.
good luck.
I have a private license that base on my foreigner license with few hundreds hours. In order to get a commercial license down the road I need to get US license. So I need to start all over again which mean to focus more on the written course and exam and some flight hours.
Thank you!!!You don't actually need to start from Private, though some find it is easier to do so. If you have an FAA Private Pilot certificate, issued on the basis of your foreign certificate, then you may begin instrument training as soon as you like. Once you pass your Instrument Rating Practical Test (Checkride,) you would have an FAA Private Pilot Certificate, "U.S. Test Passed" but still issued on the basis of your foreign certificate. Keep in mind that in order to take this Instrument Rating Practical Test, you will need to obtain a Foreign Pilot Verification letter from the local FSDO.
From there, you could begin your commercial training, keeping in mind that you would need to meet the requirements of FAR Part 61, not only for the aeronautical experience (hours) but also for the Commercial Pilot Areas of Operation listed in 14CFR 61.127(b)(1). Once you pass your Commercial Pilot Practical Test, you'll have an unrestricted FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate with an Instrument rating.
Now, Back to my original point; some people find that it is easier for them to start from scratch in the US. If time and opportunity are not an issue, then that may be the best route, Otherwise- you may look into this process of jumping right into the Instrument training.