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Use of a CRI rating

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Old 15th Mar 2010, 20:38
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Use of a CRI rating

Hello all,

I was contemplating getting a CRI rating along with a Ground instructor certificate to keep my touch with the GA side of things with the time off I have from the day job.

My main question is would any school want someone with just a CRI rating or would they much rather use a FI? What real use could I get out of a CRI rating if any?

Many thanks

Nick
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 09:23
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You can do everything but ab-initio PPL training and Night Qualification.

Tailwheel
Constant Speed
Retract
Pressurised
Turbo
EFIS
SLPC

You can do an IRI Course and teach for the IR and the IMCr. You can do a type rating course and teach for SPA Type & Class Ratings.

You can convert the holders of NPPL from ML to SSEA and vice versa.

You can carry out the 2 year Instructional flights. You can do type conversions, training for pilots who have a lapsed licence in preparation for an LPC.

You can do a CRI (ME) and teach for the Multi Engine rating.

If you have more than 800hrs P1 you could apply to become an LAA Coach and with it become a Revalidation Examiner and sign certificates of revalidation by experience.

With enough teaching time and a need you could become a Flight Examiner and carry out LPC/LST test for a variety of purposes and become an IR Examiner able to do IR revalidation's. If you do the GRI certificate you could become a GRE and conduct the PPL & IMCr ground exams.

There is more, but I think you should be able to get the drift. Whilst I hold an unrestricted FI as I work in an AOC and TRTO environment I only ever use the privileges of my CRI (SE/ME) and Examiner ratings.

If you are looking to get involved with GA to put something in rather than wanting to work in the ab-initio field the CRI is a superb rating. Just bear in mind that there is less involved in gaining the rating and thus the onus is on you to ensure that your skills match the privileges that you will gain. Small steps rather than giant leaps.
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 12:54
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Bose-x

Thanks very much for your reply, it certainly does seem like a useful rating however would I be irritating people by trying to offer the use of the rating to schools when they have FI's to do the same job? Is there anything a CRI can do that an FI can't?

Cheers
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 12:58
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I suspect that a CRI cannot act as duty FI for restricted FI's (can anyone confirm this for me ?)
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 13:03
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A CRI does not come out of the box restricted for a start so has larger opportunity for freelance.

If a school needs an Instructor and they have work for a CRI then who would you be irritating?

Personally I would suggest that you think outside the box. Aviation is a much bigger place than the average flying school and there are far more fish to fry for a freelance!! If you want to teach for the PPL you will need a school or a club. You will need an FI to teach for the PPL.

However I know of quite a number of schools who use part time CRI's for club checks, recurrent training etc. Also if you do the GRI you will find yourself with plenty of work, in my experience most of the hours building FI's are not interested in teaching Ground School as it puts nothing in the logbook.
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 13:31
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Thanks for the help

I will ask around at the local clubs and see whether there is a need.

Cheers
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 14:40
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I suspect that a CRI cannot act as duty FI for restricted FI's (can anyone confirm this for me ?)
JAR–FCL 1.325 FI(A) – Restricted
privileges
(a) Restricted period. Until the holder of a
FI(A) rating has completed at least 100 hours
flight instruction and, in addition, has supervised
at least 25 student solo flights, the privileges of
the rating are restricted. The restrictions will be
removed from the rating when the above
requirements have been met and on the
recommendation of the supervising FI(A).
How could you supervise something you are not qualified to do?
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Old 16th Mar 2010, 16:41
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Whopity

Thanks for the answer - I suspected so but with CAA logic is not always the best guide
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Old 17th Mar 2010, 16:40
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State of Licence issue

Ok then,

Supposing I did get a rating would I be restricted to only signing and conducting training for those with the same state of licence as my own?

I have an irish licence so would I be restricted to only being a CRI in the eyes of the Irish?

Cheers
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Old 17th Mar 2010, 18:50
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No. A CRI is a JAA rating in exactly the same way as an FI, TRI etc.
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Old 13th Apr 2010, 15:11
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Given the recent announcement about training at unlicensed airfields can someone give me an answer to this question, or point me in the right direction to get a reference?

The scenario:

Lifetime PPL(A) holder with lapsed rating wants to do undertake training at an unlicensed airfield with a CRI(A) in preparation for a LPC to get his licence back upto speed. Assume properly maintained and insured aircraft not operated by an FTO.

Q. Can a CRI(A) carry out this training?

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Old 13th Apr 2010, 15:48
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Yes, the CRI can conduct that training. They do not need a licensed airfield for that anyway :- it is not training for the initial issue of a licence or rating.

ifitaint..
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Old 13th Apr 2010, 16:58
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Ifitaint,

Many thanks - Having studied LASORS 2008 (New one when?) I will go with that and totally agree with you.

G
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Old 13th Apr 2010, 21:28
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Make the most of it, guys. Come the revolution, the privileges of a CRI will be to instruct for:

(1) the issue, revalidation or renewal of a type or class rating for non-complex non high performance single-pilot aeroplanes, when the privileges sought by the applicant are to fly in single-pilot operations;

(2) a towing and/or aerobatic rating for the aeroplane category, provided the CRI holds the relevant rating and has demonstrated the ability to instruct for that rating to an FI qualified in accordance with FCL.905.FI(i).


and nothing more. Note that these privileges do not include differences training for tailwheel, constant speed, retract, etc, etc. Welcome to the wonderful world of EASA where the concept of grandfather rights does not exist.
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 08:44
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Billiebob, where did you extract that from? Do you have a link to the original document?

That would have a crippling effect on us as a company as many of our pilots who teach for our type ratings do so on a CRI (ME). We are a line operation not a flying school and there is no benefit in sending people on an FI course. I should imagine that apart from the odd guys who teach in their spare time I am the only one with a valid unrestricted FI(A) yet I only use my CRI (SE/ME) privileges generally.
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 08:49
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The latest EASA-FCL NPA http://hub.easa.europa.eu/crt/docs/viewcrdpdf/id_44 and http://www.easa.europa.eu/ws_prod/r/doc/CRD b.2 - Combined Subparts + Appendices.pdf
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 09:56
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Bear in mind that you can now comment only on the changes that have been made to the original NPA and not on the NPA itself, for which the comment period has long expired. The original wording of the article was:

(a) The privileges of a CRI are to instruct for the issue, revalidation or renewal of a type or class rating for single pilot aeroplanes.

What the amendment has done is to (i) prevent a CRI from instructing for any SPA type or class rating if the candidate is seeking a rating endorsed for multi-pilot operations, (ii) prevent the CRI from instructing on complex, high performance aircraft and (iii) added the privilege to instruct for a towing and/or aerobatic rating.

It is these three changes on which comments will be accepted and they must be made by 9 June 2010 using EASA's online Comment Response Tool.

Instruction for a SPA type rating endorsed for multi-pilot operations or for a type rating on complex, high performance aeroplanes will be the province of the TRI(SPA). The privileges of this new animal will be to instruct for:

(1) the issue, revalidation and renewal of type ratings for single-pilot high
performance complex aeroplanes when the applicant seeks privileges to
operate in single-pilot operations.

The privileges of the TRI(SPA) may be extended to instruction for single-pilot
high performance complex aeroplanes type ratings in multi-pilot operations,
provided that the TRI:

(i) holds an MCCI certificate; or
(ii) holds or has held a TRI certificate for multi-pilot aeroplanes.

(2) the MPL course on the basic phase, provided that he/she has the privileges
extended to multi-pilot operations and holds or has held an FI(A) or an IRI(A) certificate.


So it will be necessary to hold a TRI(SPA) certificate to instruct in complex, high performance, single-pilot aeroplanes and, additionally, a CRI certificate to instruct in non-complex, non-high performance, single pilot aeroplanes.

Welcome to the brave new world of EASA.

p.s. And I've just noticed that the bi-annual flight for revalidation of a SEP class rating will have to be conducted by an examiner and not an instructor, one more thing that the CRI will no longer be able to do.
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 10:57
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Interesting. So who will be able to do differences training? What about things like SET?

This is an interesting bag of worms, as I said at work we have CRI's but not many current FI's. These guys are flying Turbine aircraft for a living and I even if we paid are unlikely to want to go back to doing a piston FI rating, this leaves me with limited resources to train new pilots and handle recurrancy training.
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 11:20
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bi-annual flight for revalidation of a SEP class rating will have to be conducted by an examiner
Thank goodness for that.
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Old 14th Apr 2010, 12:15
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MJ,

Why is it a 'thank goodness for that' then?

Please do tell...

Is 'biannual' rather than 'biennial' another little EASA gem?
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