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There is no, and has never been any requirement to hold a type rating to fly international. I flew as a DC8, and 747 as a F/O all over the world at the time I had no type on my FAA ATP. FedEx today does not type F/Os in either the 727, A300, or the DC10 and they all do some international flying. Yes, most other countries require a type, but the FAA does not, and that makes you good flying any place in the world. Your understanding is a common misunderstanding of the requirements.GCD said:leardrivr,
I'm curious, where do you work that did not type you in the 747? Do you fly only domestic US? If not you may be in violation in many countries.
I believe that your understanding in incorrect. The aircraft you cited above all have F/E's. At least one of Fed-Ex's F/O's in a crew of three or more pilots, not 2 pilots and an FE, would have to be type rated to engage in Int'l. operations requiring three or more pilots. Below is the reference. Hope this clears it up.FoxHunter said:There is no, and has never been any requirement to hold a type rating to fly international. I flew as a DC8, and 747 as a F/O all over the world at the time I had no type on my FAA ATP. FedEx today does not type F/Os in either the 727, A300, or the DC10 and they all do some international flying. Yes, most other countries require a type, but the FAA does not, and that makes you good flying any place in the world. Your understanding is a common misunderstanding of the requirements.
I flew the 727 all over Europe for two years out of BRU with no type. I hope they dont come get me.xdays said:I believe that your understanding in incorrect. The aircraft you cited above all have F/E's. At least one of Fed-Ex's F/O's in a crew of three or more pilots, not 2 pilots and an FE, would have to be type rated to engage in Int'l. operations requiring three or more pilots. Below is the reference. Hope this clears it up.
"Sec. 121.437
Pilot qualification: Certificates required.
(a) No pilot may act as pilot in command of an aircraft (or as second in command of an aircraft in a flag or supplemental operation that requires three or more pilots) unless he holds an airline transport pilot certificate and an appropriate type rating for that aircraft."
Yes, but the only time three pilots are required is when you exceed 8 block hours in 24. Very unusual with the A300/310 and in that case FedEx used another Captain. That no longer is the case since the A310 now overflys Iran on the DXB-CDG leg, which was the only leg the extra Captain was used. In the MD11 all F/Os are type rated because exceeding 8 or even 12 in 24 is the norm.xdays said:I believe that your understanding in incorrect. The aircraft you cited above all have F/E's. At least one of Fed-Ex's F/O's in a crew of three or more pilots, not 2 pilots and an FE, would have to be type rated to engage in Int'l. operations requiring three or more pilots. Below is the reference. Hope this clears it up.
"Sec. 121.437
Pilot qualification: Certificates required.
(a) No pilot may act as pilot in command of an aircraft (or as second in command of an aircraft in a flag or supplemental operation that requires three or more pilots) unless he holds an airline transport pilot certificate and an appropriate type rating for that aircraft."
I flew for Seaboard World, Capitol International, Evergreen, Flying Tigers, as a F/O without any type rating. In the case of Seaboard World and Capitol I held only a C&I ASMEL, no ATP. I have no idea who "non treaty countries" might be today, but I can assure you that having a type has never been a requirement.GCD said:FoxHunter,
That is true of "treaty" countries, not all countries.