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North America Still the busiest region for commercial aviation.

what is....

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Old 28th Sep 2007, 21:27
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what is....

What is DGCA and do US pilots need it? is it hard to get? is there any test involved? Where would you need DGCA?
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Old 28th Sep 2007, 21:54
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D G C A

DGCA is abbreviation of "Direction General Civil Aviation"
In other words, it designates the "FAA" or "CAA" equivalent of other nations...
Therefore their pilot license... i.e. "DGCA of (country) licence"
Each countries have different requirements and rules.
xxx

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Old 29th Sep 2007, 16:50
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Originally Posted by BelArgUSA
DGCA is abbreviation of "Direction General Civil Aviation"
Close, it actually means Director General of Civil Aviation

http://www.icao.int/icao/en/dgca/
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Old 29th Sep 2007, 20:11
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International jargons...

Correct, weasil, was just making it simple for our friend knma...
xxx
DGCA often will mean "Directorate General of Civil Aviation", and the head of this/these organizations are "Directors"... Change the order of the letters to DGAC, and it is the same thing then in other languages, such as French, or Spanish etc... i.e. Direction génerale de l'aviation civile...
xxx
And of course other countries, other languages, other initials...
i.e. Germany is "LBA" - Luft Bundes Amt...
Belgium has "Administration de l'Aéronautique"
I am too old to remember other examples...
xxx
knma -
I dont have the rest of your text there, but your probably see it with something like "your licence must be approved by this nation's DGCA"... like a US company would write "FAA certificate"... bla bla bla... You are probably looking at a job overseas, so expect them to use some different names and definitions, for documents, or licenses. Yes, you must have documents issued by other countries if you fly airplanes registered in other countries or operated by foreign companies, etc...
xxx

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Old 30th Sep 2007, 06:21
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Thank you very much for explaining that for me.
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