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LEARN TO FLY!!
Flying can become an exciting part of your life. The sensation of breaking the bounds of the earth and navigating above the towns and fields to see our world in a way that few experience, can only be understood by those who have done it. Flying challenges you, provides continuous learning, builds confidence, and makes you a member of an exclusive and wonderful family called pilots. What are the Basic Requirements for an Airplane Private Pilot License? The requirements for being issued a private pilot license are governed by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) of the U.S. Department of Transportation. To get a private pilots license, you must
Details of these requirements are later in this document. Can't wait! Although the minimum required flight time is 40 hours, the national average is approximately 65 hours and most additional time is due to instruction. The amount of flight time necessary to achieve your license is, in part, a function of how often you fly. Students who fly twice a week are likely to earn their license with fewer logged hours than those flying only two or three times a month. Keeping Your License Current Remember, a private pilot license is really only a license to learn, and to maintain and improve flight proficiency. You should be prepared to fly at least 50 hours every year to maintain your skills. The legal requirements for flight reviews and recent flight experience are governed by FAA FAR (Federal Aviation Regulations) Sec. 61.56 and Sec 61.57. In general, in order to keep your license current, so that you can operated an airplane as pilot in command, the FAA requires that you complete a Biennial Flight Review (BFR) with a certified flight instructor every two years. This review requires a minimum of 1 hour of ground instruction and 1 hour of flight instruction to review flight maneuvers and emergency procedures. In order to carry passengers, you must also have completed at least three takeoffs and three landings as the sole manipulator of the flight controls in an aircraft of the same category and class within the preceding 90 days. To fly at night (one hour after sunset to one hour before sunrise), you must have completed, within the preceding 90 days, at least three takeoffs and three landings to a full stop at night in the category and class of aircraft to be used. How Can I Prepare for the Written Exam? There are many courseware packages available that give you the information that the FAA Private Pilot Exam covers. The following are a list of useful government manuals. Several of these manuals can be accessed on the Landings home page .FARs Federal Aviation Regulations
There is also information available about the Airmen Knowledge Test Information at this site which contains links to test question documents. Where Can I Go to Learn to Fly? Take a trip to your local airport and visit the businesses on the airfield. If it isnt obvious where the flight schools are, local business, the Airport Manager, and the guy at the gas pump often know who gives lessons locally. You can often find flight school listings in the phone book. When you find a flight school, spend the time to learn about their policies, the cost to join the club, monthly and yearly dues, what type of planes they have, how the planes are maintained, what their insurance coverage is, and who the flight instructors are. Be sure to interview the flight instructor that you are thinking about taking instruction from. This is a person that you will be spending at least 20 hours in a plane with and a lot of time at a desk with, so you should feel comfortable with the instructor. The right instructor-student combination can make learning to fly very pleasant. OK, So What Are the Detailed Requirements for a Private Pilot License? Well, here they are. The links in this section are to a very helpful Internet site. Requirements regulating the licensing of private pilots are established by the Federal Aviation Administration of the U.S. Department of Transportation and set forth in Federal Aviation Regulation, Part 61. Sec. 61.109 Airplane Rating: Aeronautical Experience An applicant for a private pilot certificate with an airplane rating must have had at least a total of 40 hours of flight instruction and solo time which must include the following: (a) Twenty hours of flight instruction from an authorized flight instructor, including at least--
An applicant who does not meet the night flying requirement in paragraph (a)(2) of this section is issued a private pilot certificate bearing the limitation "Night flying prohibited." This limitation may be removed if the holder of the certificate shows that he has met the requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (b) Ten hours of solo flight time, including at least:
Sec 61.103 Eligibility requirements: General. To be eligible for a private pilot certificate, a person must--
An applicant for a private pilot certificate must have logged ground instruction from an authorized instructor, or must present evidence showing that he has satisfactorily completed a course of instruction or home study in at least the following areas of aeronautical knowledge appropriate to the category of aircraft for which a rating is sought. Airplanes and rotorcraft.
Sec 61.107 Flight Proficiency (Airplane Sec 61.107(a) only) The applicant for a private pilot certificate must have logged instruction from an authorized flight instructor in at least the following pilot operations. In addition, his logbook must contain an endorsement by an authorized flight instructor who has found him competent to perform each of those operations safely as a private pilot. In Airplanes.
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Most recent update 5/25/04 Webmaster@ninety-nines.org |