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CFII Before CFI ?

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No....I think we have been around and around on this one. No more comment on this from me.
 
FAA Order 8700.1, Vol 2, Chap 11,Section 1, Para 8
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flight instructors who hold an “INSTRUMENT—AIRPLANE” rating only on their flight instructor certificate are authorized to give instrument flight instruction in single- and/or multiengine airplanes for instrument certification, provided they hold single- and/or multiengine ratings on their pilot certificate.
==============================

Not my research but it would appear to give the necessary allowance to allow CFI-IA only to give instrument training in an airplane.
 
FAA Order 8700.1, Vol 2, Chap 11,Section 1, Para 8
==============================
flight instructors who hold an “INSTRUMENT—AIRPLANE” rating only on their flight instructor certificate are authorized to give instrument flight instruction in single- and/or multiengine airplanes for instrument certification, provided they hold single- and/or multiengine ratings on their pilot certificate.
==============================

Not my research but it would appear to give the necessary allowance to allow CFI-IA only to give instrument training in an airplane.
That would be a reasonable asumption based on your quote of the FAA Order 8700.1...but,..what's the date on that, and do you know it's current?...and has it been 'updated' to reflect the current FAR.
I know for a fact that the 8700.1 sometimes lags behind in getting changed to reflect FAR changes, particularly Part 61 Certification rules. They are the lowest on the totem pole of 'FAA things to do' list.

That Order would reflect the old rule, when the verbage was not the same as 61.195(b)(1) reads now.

And any FAA Inspector will tell you that FAR's supercede FAA Order 8700.1. It's a workbook designed to detail the execution of FAR's, not implement them, or be used as case evidence.
It's like OpSpecs which haven't been updated to reflect regulatory changes. And the Inspector is supposed to be aware and not use it - or make the appropriate change - which, of course, leads to individual interpretations.
 
Nosehair:

I have seen much evidence that goes against your view on the authority of the CFI-IA yet you insist it is all wrong because the FAR has been changed. Yet it has been proven that the FAR has been the same for many years. So I don't understand why you are so strongly in support of the postion that a CFI-IA must have an Airplane rating on his CFI certificate to teach instruments in an airplane.

So anyway, my question to you it this: Do you know of any FSDO that would not renew a CFI-IA (only) that presented a record of 5 recommendations with 5 passes for the IRA flight test. And if any of those files came through that office from the FSDO's examiners would that FSDO reject them by saying the CFI-IA wasn't qualified. And if all that is true of that office, wouldn't the Office have an obligaton to come after the CFI-IA for giving unauthorized CFI instruction when not qualified. So can you name such a FSDO who would do all of this in support of your postion?

On the other hand, I do know that the DPA FSDO has promptly renewed such a CFI based on this activity and that was the end of it. I would guess that all FSDO's would do the same because that is the current direction from Washington based on my latest calls to them on this subject.
 
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Nosehair:

I have seen much evidence that goes against your view on the authority of the CFI-IA yet you insist it is all wrong because the FAR has been changed. Yet it has been proven that the FAR has been the same for many years. So I don't understand why you are so strongly in support of the postion that a CFI-IA must have an Airplane rating on his CFI certificate to teach instruments in an airplane.

So anyway, my question to you it this: Do you know of any FSDO that would not renew a CFI-IA (only) that presented a record of 5 recommendations with 5 passes for the IRA flight test. And if any of those files came through that office from the FSDO's examiners would that FSDO reject them by saying the CFI-IA wasn't qualified. And if all that is true of that office, wouldn't the Office have an obligaton to come after the CFI-IA for giving unauthorized CFI instruction when not qualified. So can you name such a FSDO who would do all of this in support of your postion?

On the other hand, I do know that the DPA FSDO has promptly renewed such a CFI based on this activity and that was the end of it. I would guess that all FSDO's would do the same because that is the current direction from Washington based on my latest calls to them on this subject.
I'm not supporting the position, merely speculating on the obvious wording of FAR 61.195(b)(1). I am looking for supporting evidence of this authorization.

As far as FSDO's treatment of the rating, it is in confusion, and it is a legal rating that you can work with - in a simulator. IR applicants can get 25 hours hood in an airplane with a safety pilot, then do the 15 hours with a CFII in a sim - and that CFII can recommend, so there you go.
 
Nosehair, I don't think anyone else shares your interpretation of this reg. It just doesn't make logical sense and makes the CFII very restrictive.
 
Nosehair, I don't think anyone else shares your interpretation of this reg. It just doesn't make logical sense and makes the CFII very restrictive.
It isn't an "interpretation", it is black-and-white. Just because the FSDO says it's ok doesn't make it true.

As far as "logical", don't you really think it is "logical" for an airplane instructor to have "airplane instructor" on his instructor certificate? Doesn't matter if he's only teaching instruments - he's instructing in the air in an airplane. Show me one street person who thinks that is "logical" and safe.

You, we, the pilot population may screw it around to make it "logical" because it makes the training / rating ladder easier to climb. That's the kind of skewed logic you're using.
 
That would be a reasonable asumption based on your quote of the FAA Order 8700.1...but,..what's the date on that, and do you know it's current?...and has it been 'updated' to reflect the current FAR.
I know for a fact that the 8700.1 sometimes lags behind in getting changed to reflect FAR changes, particularly Part 61 Certification rules. They are the lowest on the totem pole of 'FAA things to do' list.
Good question. First of all, I'll say that I personally agree with your reading of the reg on both a legal and "sense" level (teaching a single engine instrument approach in a twin doesn't require an CFI-AME? :confused: And, there is a bit of history, including, as I recall, a Eastern Regional FAA legal opinion, that supports your reading.

But...

The version of 8700.1 that blurb comes from includes the revisions through 11-15-05, so it is current. Or, at least as current as it can be - Order 8700.1 was (recently) canceled and replaced by 8900.1 (http://fsims.faa.gov/). The quoted language has been reproduced without change at para 5-503.


I don't know what the prior 61.195 language was (or even if it was in the same place), but the current 61.195 language goes back to the August 1997 Part 61 revision.

Although it is not mentioned in the part dealing with this, there are in fact revisions to 8700.1 that deal with the the fact that "On August 4, 1997, a complete rewrite of part 61 became effective." (the quote is from a part of 8700.1 that talks about night flying restrictions).

FWIW group, the 8700.1 interpretation is identical to John Lynch's in the officially-disowned Part 61 FAQ which was written specifically to deal with the 1997 revisions.

Even if it's a low-priority item for the 8700.1/8900.1, 10 years is a bit long to let a glaring error sit around uncorrected.

One anecdotal piece -I am aware of one enforcement action that was initiated against an instructor for a violation of 61.195 for giving instrument instruction in a multi with a CFI-ASE and CFI-IA but not CFI-AME (but with an AMEL on the commercial certificate). The information I have (I was not directly involved) is that after the FAA Inspector conferred with Lynch, the action was dropped.
 
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