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"jsmith" wrote in message ... For example, will an pilot trained from the onset in an aircraft equipped with a Garmin G-1000 panel from private through instrument ratings be restricted to only those airplanes with Garmin panels? Formally, as in "by the FAA?" Probably not for some time. There are no "equipment ratings" required for GPS, WAAS, HSI, autopilots, or pretty much anything else. FITS suggests this may get a little tighter but the reality is that while the FAA gets to paint the bus, it will be driven by the insurance companies. They *already* require more type-specific training than the FAA ever did. Without the training in how to interpret the steam gauges, could they safely fly in a traditional paneled airplane in heavy IFR? I suspect it will be a *long* time before pilots are trained ab-initio on glass. From what I hear, places like Embry-Riddle et. al. are eager to get glass-panel trainers primarily to "familiarize" students with them so the first time they fly one *isn't* on an airline simulator interview. Likewise, round gauges are hardly disappearing anytime soon. Most older jets (up to big birds like DC-8s) and turboprop commuters still have them, and it's quite likely that's where an E-R graduate will get his or her first flying job. How about the pilot trained in "traditional" panel airplanes with "steam gauges"? Will they require an endorsement before being permitted to rent or fly "glass panel" aircraft in instrument conditions? Almost certainly. When I rented, you needed a checkout to operate the FBO's '98 Skyhawk just because it had fuel injection, while all their other birds were carbureted. In any case I doubt glass-panel planes will enter the general rental fleet that fast, as not that many FBOs have the cash flow to justify buying a $200,000 new 172 when $50k will buy a perfectly sufficient older one. Likewise, I wonder how much IFR is flown in rental planes without a CFII in the right seat. My guess is "not very much." -cwk. |
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