Safety Pilots
My husband has just renewed his Class 2 medical, but has to fly with a safety pilot. No problem, we always fly together anyway.
BUT .... my medical is due in August (and I'm no spring chicken!) so, what happens if I too have to fly with a Safety Pilot?? The CAA says: "A safety pilot is a pilot who is current and qualified to act as Pilot In Command (PIC) on the class/type of aeroplane and carried on board the aeroplane for the purpose of taking over control should the person acting as the PIC become incapacitated." So can we be safety pilots for each other?? Prunie |
I suspect that nobody has asked that question before, and that it may not be in your interests to ask it officially.
G |
Well, that's all well and good until the Insurance claim - best ask the question!
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Yes, Insurance was one of my worries!
But it seems to me we should be OK because the probability of us BOTH keeling over at the same time is considerably lower than the prob of just one of us doing so. |
or the fact that if you both keel over at the same time, insurance will be the least of your problems :)
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In the legal definition, "safety pilot" is just that. So long as he/she is licensed/current, all should be good.
You have more chances of your prop falling off than both pilots simultaneously keeling over. Insurance co will verify. |
I do not know the answer from the private world. However commercially if one pilot has an OML (restriction to fly with another pilot) then the other pilot MUST NOT be so restricted.
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Ah, interesting. I would think it is relevant.
If so there is only one answer - pass my medical with flying colours! |
But the situation Wide-Body is describing is one where both pilots are normally required to safely operate the aircraft, and also where farepaying passengers are being protected. I don't think that this is a correct parallel to two qualified pilots flying together for recreational purposes only.
G |
I imagine that the occasion of 2 PPLs needing safety pilots doesn't come up very often.
So I assumed the CAA would try to apply one principle across the board. |
Take George as well, just to be on the safe side. :)
Good luck with your medical. Hopefully your question will be irrelevant to your circumstances. |
I wonder since when did Insurance Companies became involved in deciding regulation? Apart from using it to avoid payments...
I would suggest having a look at the CAA Safety Pilot Information Sheet and particularly the extract below: WHAT IS AN OPERATIONAL SAFETY PILOT LIMITATION (OSL)? This limitation is added to a medical certificate when a pilot is considered to be at increased risk of incapacitation compared to his/her peer group. The holder of the medical certificate is precluded from solo flying and always has to fly with a safety pilot Now put yourself in the place of a regulator being asked the question, can 2 safety pilots fly together? As neither here are allowed to fly solo, and always have to fly with a safety pilot, how can either one comply with this regulation in the case of the other becoming incapacitated? IMO, therefore, the answer has to be No. The correct course of action must be to ask the CAA and, if by some chance they allow it, keep a written record of their answer in case of later problems with Insurers. |
3wheels you say "....As neither here are allowed to fly solo, and always have to fly with a safety pilot, how can either one comply with this regulation in the case of the other becoming incapacitated?...."
But the same situation would occur if the Safety Pilot was incapacitated .... |
But the same situation would occur if the Safety Pilot was incapacitated .... However, you are looking at in an increased risk, however small, which does not appear to be covered by the current published CAA criteria. As I said, the correct course of action is to ask for an opinion from the CAA as to whether it is permitted to have two pilots flying together who both require safety pilots. Only they, not an Insurance company, can give you the definitive answer. |
You're right, of course but meantime I'll just try to keep as fit as possible so I pass my medical.
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The answer lies in the statement
"A safety pilot is a pilot who is current and qualified to act as Pilot In Command (PIC) on the class/type of aeroplane and carried on board the aeroplane for the purpose of taking over control should the person acting as the PIC become incapacitated." |
What happens when the need for a Class II for PPL disappears this summer? Unless you are commercial or performing aerobatics, that is. Can you both self-certificate according to the CAA form (internet based)? If so and under 70 then that's it until you are 70. [If over 70 then you need to self-certificate every 3 years]
That's how I read it, anyway. Now waiting for the Air Navigation Order 2016 to be published. |
Whopity said "if you were only QUALIFIED to operate with another pilot..."
Well my hubby is QUALIFIED, he has all his QUALIFICATIONS. He just has a medical which requires a safety pilot in case of illness. |
Prunie,
May I suggest that you delay your August medical until the new CAA regulation comes out in September. Then you can self declare under the new rules without any known medical issues and carry on as normal. As I understand it you will not be able to do this if your medical shows up any problems. Obviously, if you do pass your medical in August you will be able to self declare as long as you deem yourself to be fit. |
But the new rules will only apply to National Licenses and not JAA/EASA licences, so will only apply to a few pilots!
He just has a medical which requires a safety pilot in case of illness. |
Yes, but the same would apply if he had a Safety Pilot with Class I medical, who keeled over. What should he do, bail out?!
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Not on the CAA write up I saw - it didn't mention the Safety Pilot's medical condition at all just said they had to be:
"... current and qualified to act as Pilot In Command (PIC) on the class/type of aeroplane and carried on board the aeroplane for the purpose of taking over control ..." |
Qualified to act as Pilot In Command (PIC)
That would exclude someone who needs a safety pilot. |
Not on the CAA write up I saw - it didn't mention the Safety Pilot's medical condition at all just said they had to be: "... current and qualified to act as Pilot In Command (PIC) on the class/type of aeroplane and carried on board the aeroplane for the purpose of taking over control ..." Yes, but the same would apply if he had a Safety Pilot with Class I medical, who keeled over. What should he do, bail out?! Aren't we starting to loose touch with reality now? Please do ask the people who know...the CAA. I would be interested to know their answer. |
Please do ask the people who know...the CAA. I would be interested to know their answer. Having conducted many Medical Flight Tests, if a person has a medical restriction on their licence requiring a second pilot, then they are not qualified to act as a Safety Pilot. I was on a unit in the RAF where we had a one eyed pilot and the posters wanted to send us another one eyed pilot. The boss dug his heels in as all pilots were dual seat qualified and he envisaged a situation where both eyes at the front could be on the inside! |
The ruling in the airline world is that two pilots who have a two crew restriction and need to operate with another qualified pilot are not allowed to fly together. Each one's medical restriction conflicts with the others licence so assuming a Class 2 interpretation is the same as that of a Class 1 I would do your best to pass your medical.
Good Luck. |
Or get an LAPL. The medical is much simpler and lasts for 2 years instead of 1.
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I was on a unit in the RAF |
At what point did he say it was relevant? It was just an interesting aside.
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Totally irrelevant to rules in civvy operations! |
It had nothing to do with any rules, it was an illustration of a situation that nearly happened, because medics had not considered the broader picture! |
Originally Posted by Genghis the Engineer
(Post 9385554)
I suspect that nobody has asked that question before, and that it may not be in your interests to ask it officially.
G If nothing untoward ever occurs where the Safety Pilot has to intervene there will never be an issue. If something did happen where the Safety Pilot had to intervene you are in a far better position as a trained pilot than someone who had perhaps done a 'pinch hitter' course knowing just enough to get the aircraft safely back on the ground. |
I was curious and decided to ask the CAA for my own knowledge.
The answer...... Medical Dept were uninterested. She said if the pilot was fit to fly but had a 'safety pilot endorsement' it meant just that. She said that it would be a licensing issue and duly transferred me to the licensing dept. Licensing dept said.... "The 'safety pilot endorsement' means that the pilot cannot undertake the privileges of PIC solo AND MUST have another licensed pilot with them. IF the other pilot had the same 'safety pilot endorsement' THEY CAN fly together under Class two [2] ONLY". He recommended that insurers were notified. |
Now I have a question for Jetblu.
Had the answer been less permissive, more restrictive, would you have posted your findings on here? And, had you done so would you expect the OP to be pleased or pissed that you had? |
DeltaV
The question raised by the OP was a very good one. None of us knew the definitive answer. 1 "Had the answer been less permissive, more restrictive, would you have posted your findings on here?" Answer - Yes. 2 "And, had you done so would you expect the OP to be pleased or pissed that you had?" Answer - I, or anyone, have no way of ever knowing if the OP had ever returned to this board to seek any further clarification. Someone, for sure, WILL be very interested with the answer. |
:confused:Thanks, Jetblu. My collegue and I are in the same position, but we only have medical declarations and NPPLs. Did the CAA mention that senario?
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There's the letter of the law, and the spirit. The clear intention is that a restricted pilot should fly with an unrestricted one, whatever the legalistic arguments manage to prove.
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Croqueteer
I don't see much difference between 'safety pilot endorsement' on a PPL and a NPPL. The letter of the law and clear intention is that the pilot CANNOT fly solo, nothing more. He [the CAA] did indicate a Class 1 scenario would be a completely different kettle of fish. Give them a call for your own peace of mind. He was relatively friendly and concurred that the chances of two private pilots keeling over simultaneously was pretty slim. |
Shirley if two restricted pilots fly together with the object of safety, if only one of them conks out the other is now carrying a passenger, so is now illegal?
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FFS, Jetblu asked the right people & got the answer so why continue arguing the toss?:rolleyes:
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