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When I got military flight physicals, I would ask the flight surgeon for and receive an FAA CLass II at the same time. What's wrong with that?For example: since the military flying physical will count in lieu of a Class II medical (maybe it's Class I, but I can't remember), what will those pilots carry to prove they have the military physical?
That military flight surgeon was also a designated FAA AME. He was also authorized to sign FAA physicals. Not all military flight surgeons are. It is an individual additional authority/responsibility that is taken on by the individual person.When I got military flight physicals, I would ask the flight surgeon for and receive an FAA CLass II at the same time. What's wrong with that?
Granted, but they were readily available in my day. Are they not now?That military flight surgeon was also a designated FAA AME. He was also authorized to sign FAA physicals. Not all military flight surgeons are. It is an individual additional authority/responsibility that is taken on by the individual person.
No, not 'en masse', but some will.I suppose a lot of folks think that military pilots are just going to quit their day jobs, run down to the local FBO, and sign up to be 172 instructors, en masse, and they will all think they are "ready to go" in the piston single world with their CFI in hand.
Oh, you were there too?:beer:...and uphill both ways in a snow storm!
I don't really know, but I suspect it is a different world now. What with everybody being so 'sensitive', and 'liability' cautious.Granted, but they were readily available in my day. Are they not now?
The beauty of this is that you'll also get your jet-powererd taildragger endorsement too! :beer:All I want is a high altitude endorsement from Huggyu2
I would expect the students to be signed off for solo, solo X-C and for certification with many glaring omissions in their training record.
I have given nothing but praise for military flight instructors and the work they do. I am quite sure they know full well how to do that job.Pre-sortie preparation -- e.g. knowing what required prerequisite training is, verifying accomplishment of that training in the student's gradebook, knowing what the syllabus requires on the current sortie, and tailoring the profile/instruction to meet those requirements -- is the cornerstone of how a military IP performs his business.
For those Military IP's that were taught the FAA system and civilan aircraft will have a much better transition as a "civilian" CFI than those who are just "granted" a CFI with out additional training and exams.
My example: A Dentist and a Proctologist are both doctors who look into human orifices, but they have very different points of view.......... But, I would not want them to trade jobs (and work on me) with out some additional training and certification (and I would hope some OJT).....
I do not know many CFI's that think they can just jump into the Military IP position. It seems that (at least here) are Military IP's that think they can just jump into being a CFI with knowing the "Civilian" world of flying. IMHO it will just be trouble for the student and the "CFI".
IMHO the present system of certification works, and not just for primary training but for any "civilian" training. There is more to the system than just flying the aircraft.
Again my objection is in the "granting" a CFI with out the civilian system knowledge and certification exams.