Hi,
First post here. At the present time I am a truck driver, though I have to be honest, trucking has really worn out its welcome with me after 21 years. One of the options I am looking at is pursuing an ATP license.
Here on the ground where we have more wheels than most of you have on your birds, we are subject to a physical exam every two years at minimum. Any physician registered with the USDOT may perform these to a set of specifications decreed by USDOT. Certain conditions may subject a driver to more frequent renewal intervals: for example, high blood pressure means you get a 1-year card, diabetes means you get a 3-month card, and so on.
I'm sure all of that sounds at least somewhat familiar to what you all have to do to keep the FAA happy. My question, if there is anybody here who knows, is how similar the DOT and FAA exams are, and to what extent, if any, one of the two would be considered satisfactory toward the other.
The physical movement skills involved are largely, though certainly not completely, the same -- a yoke is basically a steering wheel but with less travel, the use of two feet to operate the rudder would not be entirely foreign to an old-school manual-transmission driver, etc.. Obviously there are some differences in the details, but there are also some broad similarities in terms of what the physician is instructed to assess. For that reason, I bring the question to you.
First post here. At the present time I am a truck driver, though I have to be honest, trucking has really worn out its welcome with me after 21 years. One of the options I am looking at is pursuing an ATP license.
Here on the ground where we have more wheels than most of you have on your birds, we are subject to a physical exam every two years at minimum. Any physician registered with the USDOT may perform these to a set of specifications decreed by USDOT. Certain conditions may subject a driver to more frequent renewal intervals: for example, high blood pressure means you get a 1-year card, diabetes means you get a 3-month card, and so on.
I'm sure all of that sounds at least somewhat familiar to what you all have to do to keep the FAA happy. My question, if there is anybody here who knows, is how similar the DOT and FAA exams are, and to what extent, if any, one of the two would be considered satisfactory toward the other.
The physical movement skills involved are largely, though certainly not completely, the same -- a yoke is basically a steering wheel but with less travel, the use of two feet to operate the rudder would not be entirely foreign to an old-school manual-transmission driver, etc.. Obviously there are some differences in the details, but there are also some broad similarities in terms of what the physician is instructed to assess. For that reason, I bring the question to you.