Hatunen wrote:
On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 21:21:17 -0500, Jim Logajan
wrote:
Hatunen wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote:
Hatunen writes:
I wonder if John Travolta has an ATR...?
He has a 707 and I think at least one other jet. John Travolta is a
private pilot, single and multi-engine land airplane, with an
instrument rating--not an ATP.
Fascinating. Cite, please?
The FAA provides a web page that allows you to search their airmen
registry:
https://amsrvs.registry.faa.gov/airmeninquiry/
Just enter information about yourself, click on submit, then enter as
much information as you know about person you are interested in. There
is only one entry that matches last name Travolta.
That page shows street and city as required entries. I don't know
thm so I went no further.
You don't know your own street and city? ;-)
You put YOUR identifying info in that first page, not that of the airmen
you want to look up. If you don't want to ID yourself to the FAA (I don't
see the big deal) that's your call.
Street and city of the airmen you are interested in is not required when
you get to the query page itself. For example, I searched for last name
"Hatunen" and came across just one entry, with an issue date of
6/26/1968. Yours, perchance?
The FAA has another web page to search for aircraft, but isn't very
useful for finding who owns what, since they are oftened owned
indirectly via holding companies:
http://registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry/
But thanks for that one. I've been trying to remember that
website is. It's kind of interesting to look up the old aircraft
I flew in. I see Piper J-3 Cub N3609K that I learned to first fly
in here in Tucson in 1966 is now owned by someone in Minnesota. I
was a one-fourth owner. One of my co-owners managed to encounter
an invisible dust devil on the runway on his first solo landing
and the plane was written off by our insurer as totaled. The
plane was sort of flyable, and the insurance company sold it to
someone who got a special ferry permit and it flew out of our
lives.
You're welcome.