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![]() "Bill Zaleski" wrote in message ... Let's not make this more difficult that it is. Just check the limitations section of the FAR's pertaining to flight instructors. I agree this is what the FARs say. However, the FAA then breaks its own rules when they issue CFII-only certificates bearing "Instrument Airplane" as the category/class description since "Instrument Airplane" is not a category/class yet the FARs say an instructor can only instructor in the category/class on his instructor certificate. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
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Category and class does NOT necessarily go on the instructor
certificate. You never see "sea" on one. You must, however, have the specific class on your pilot certificate for the aircraft you intend to give instruction in, even if it's instrument instruction. If you don't hold multi and instrument priviliges on BOTH of your certificates, you can't give ANY instrument instruction in multi's. The reason that reference is made to category and class with respect to flight instructor certificates in the exception in that an instrument- rotorcraft helicopter rating on an instructor certificate does not include gyroplane, since it doesn't exist. The same reg references the need for a type rating, if appropriate, but of course that doesn't exist either on CFI certificates. You must however, hold the type rating on the pilot cert in order to give any instruction in such an aircraft. Again, there is no gray area. FAR 61.195 (b) (aircraft ratings) is clear that you must comply with both provisions in entirety, not just one of them. The pre-1997 wording of the FAR was a grey area loophole that has been plugged. On Sat, 20 Mar 2004 14:39:37 GMT, "Richard Kaplan" wrote: "Bill Zaleski" wrote in message .. . Let's not make this more difficult that it is. Just check the limitations section of the FAR's pertaining to flight instructors. I agree this is what the FARs say. However, the FAA then breaks its own rules when they issue CFII-only certificates bearing "Instrument Airplane" as the category/class description since "Instrument Airplane" is not a category/class yet the FARs say an instructor can only instructor in the category/class on his instructor certificate. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
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