Power and Sail Squadron recreational boater qualifications.
On Wed, 03 Sep 2008 11:51:08 -0500, cavelamb himself
wrote:
Not necessarily straw-men. An airline pilot with an atr, perhaps
backed with a cpl multiengine - ir, is not permited to fly a single
alone until he obtains that class
Brian W
That's just plain not true.
try again
There have been cases where a non pilot buys a twin, and learns to fly
in it. Those guys are not licensed for singles. No training in off
airport power off landings, for one important thing.
Casady
Few and far between.
And an ATR rating is just that - a rating.
Not a license.
Ho hum - when you're in a hole - it's best to stop digging.
If the folks who actually have a pilot ticket take it out they will
probably see under Para II "Ratings & Limitations:"
airplane single engine land.
If they DON't see that, the FAA might be interested if they
hear about single engine flight that is not in the light sport or
ultralight brackets.
And that applies to pilots with an atr (a.k.a an ATPL or ATP
depending on who issued it....)
Brian W
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