Liberalizing medical requirements
Moderatrix
Test Pilot for Annick Goutal
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This thread is really here to report legislation changes. We are getting a bit of thread drift with members posting their personal medical stories. Probably better off posting in the main area of the forum where you will likely get more responses and discussion.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Apologies if this has been covered before but the thread is too long to read!
My AME has now confirmed that the dropping of medicals from 6 to 12 months is ONLY for multi crew pilots. Single crew IFR pilots still retain ALL the old regs: ECG every 6 months and medical every 6 months??
Has that been mentioned before?
My AME has now confirmed that the dropping of medicals from 6 to 12 months is ONLY for multi crew pilots. Single crew IFR pilots still retain ALL the old regs: ECG every 6 months and medical every 6 months??
Has that been mentioned before?
Hi Guys,
Question on all of this. I'm 59 and a bit, well a big bit. Next medical due in March, class one. Will this be for 6 months or one year? Both will take me past my 60th and I expect the one after that to be for only 6 months, but not sure about this one. Any one in this situation with an answer?
Question on all of this. I'm 59 and a bit, well a big bit. Next medical due in March, class one. Will this be for 6 months or one year? Both will take me past my 60th and I expect the one after that to be for only 6 months, but not sure about this one. Any one in this situation with an answer?
The Original Whirly
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ciderman,
See http://www.caa.co.uk/docs/49/SRG_MED...ateExpiryDates[2362].pdf where the changes are summarised. Basically, it's every year up to 60, EXCEPT for those pilots involved in AOC type passenger carrying single pilot ops. So if you're an instructor or multicrew, it's annually.
However, not all AMEs know this, or didn't when I renewed mine last month. Not that it matters - you'll get the same certificate, stating that the validity period varies depending on what you do.
Hope that helps.
See http://www.caa.co.uk/docs/49/SRG_MED...ateExpiryDates[2362].pdf where the changes are summarised. Basically, it's every year up to 60, EXCEPT for those pilots involved in AOC type passenger carrying single pilot ops. So if you're an instructor or multicrew, it's annually.
However, not all AMEs know this, or didn't when I renewed mine last month. Not that it matters - you'll get the same certificate, stating that the validity period varies depending on what you do.
Hope that helps.
Thanks Whirly,
Just done it and you are correct. Multi pilot ops and you get a year, single pilot and it's still 6 months. All detailed on the certificate. Hope this helps others.
Just done it and you are correct. Multi pilot ops and you get a year, single pilot and it's still 6 months. All detailed on the certificate. Hope this helps others.
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Initial Medical Exam for Cabin Crew at Ryanair
Hi,
I am attending a cabin Crew Training soon and I was just wondering what does this medical exam consist of? Has anyone been through one? Thanks a million.
I am attending a cabin Crew Training soon and I was just wondering what does this medical exam consist of? Has anyone been through one? Thanks a million.
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Class 1 vision renewal
I am currently a holder of a class 1 medical (right on the limit for initial with -6 short sightedness correction on one side). I was recently going through the JAA FCL3 to check whether there was any limit for eyesight correction for the renewal of the medical.
The document says that a person who has correction beyond -6 and is experienced to the satisfaction of the AME can get his renewal. Im a ppl holder with the intention of getting a FI rating and a CPL in the future. Would that make me 'not sufficiently experienced' and lose me my medical if i go beyond -6?
cheers!
The document says that a person who has correction beyond -6 and is experienced to the satisfaction of the AME can get his renewal. Im a ppl holder with the intention of getting a FI rating and a CPL in the future. Would that make me 'not sufficiently experienced' and lose me my medical if i go beyond -6?
cheers!
Last edited by Malta_Flyer; 1st Nov 2008 at 22:47.
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Meanwhile, it looks like the UK CAA continues to lobby for the removal of refraction limits: see section 5.3 of the Minutes of the 26th Meeting of the Civil Aviation Medicine Forum. No idea what the outcome of that was.
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Welcome to the world of international standardisation!
You could try contacting the JAA to see if they will publish the minutes of the meeting. You might even be able to force them to if there's some applicable "Freedom of Information" legislation. But I don't know anything about that...
You could try contacting the JAA to see if they will publish the minutes of the meeting. You might even be able to force them to if there's some applicable "Freedom of Information" legislation. But I don't know anything about that...
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Meanwhile, it looks like the UK CAA continues to lobby for the removal of refraction limits: see section 5.3 of the Minutes of the 26th Meeting of the Civil Aviation Medicine Forum. No idea what the outcome of that was.
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From my direct experience, the CAA are open to the idea (and have been trying for some time) of going down the route of the FAA in that there is no limit to the amount of eyesight correction you need so long as corrective lenses bring your vision to a high standard. However, we are in an EASA world and its the other countries like France and Germany that continue to block the UK CAA's moves on this subject.
Our only hope is to watch this space and hope the other Europeans see sense, pardon the pun
Our only hope is to watch this space and hope the other Europeans see sense, pardon the pun