“Even if I had, they would not be very useful for you people outside Germany, since these are exactly the details that vary from country to country (read: authority to authority).”
One of the claims of EASA is that standards will be uniform throughout Europe.
Many of us sense that this is not so: hence curiosity for information.
Here in the UK we are suspicious that the CAA is ‘gold plating’ the EASA requirements.
Any factual details as to what other EU countries are/are not demanding would be useful information.
Actually, in hindsight, things couldn’t have turned out much better for ICAO IR holders.
On the basis that if somebody is threatened with a leg amputation, having just their willy amputated is an improvement
We now have these additional items
On the basis that if somebody is threatened with a leg amputation, having just their willy amputated is an improvement
Personally….those prosthetic legs aren’t that bad!
Pardon if the question sounds idiotic, I am still trying to get my head around this – once we get this famous EASA IR, is it good for flying a N-reg all around EASA, or only “in the airspace of the authority that issued the certificate”? In which case it’d be rather useless…
You still need your FAA licence to do that. EASA is just making you have an EASA one as well. You have to remember the “airspace of the authority who issued the certificate” thing is an FAA Rule.
Well I answered the question you asked – if it was obvious why ask it? A 61.75 is a “complete certification” if by that you mean a true FAA certificate. If you mean do you need a standalone FAA licence, why would the situation there have changed? FAA rules haven’t altered.
Ah, um, yes, i meant standalone FAA. My grey matter seems to have taken a day off today…
Nothing changes the fact that under ICAO you need pilot papers issued by the state of registry of the aircraft, to get worldwide privileges (for noncommercial VFR and, if applicable IFR).
What EASA has done is exercised the airspace owner’s right to impose additional requirements. They could have just as well required you to get a certificate in taxidermy. It would have been precisely as valid. ICAO allows each contracting state to retain absolute sovereignity within its borders – obviously, otherwise nobody would have signed up – and this is how EASA was able to impose this on EU countries.
FAR 61.3 allows an N-reg to be flown on pilot papers issued by the owner of the airspace, but that is practically almost useless because you would need UK issued papers to fly in the UK, German issued papers to fly in Germany, etc. That concession is OK only for people who never leave their own country.
Some random reading here