New Rating paperwork/certificate

X3 Skier

En-Route
Joined
Jul 3, 2011
Messages
4,604
Location
GDK & SBS
Display Name

Display name:
Geezer
I passed my proficiency check for the ASES Rating and sent the paperwork to the FAA in OKC.

Just curious how long it takes to get back the temporary document and the new certificate.

Anyone have recent experiences?

Cheers
 
Which temporary document?

I assume this is at the Sport Pilot level, in which case I don’t believe you get a new certificate.
 
Last edited:
I passed my proficiency check for the ASES Rating and sent the paperwork to the FAA in OKC.

Just curious how long it takes to get back the temporary document and the new certificate.

Anyone have recent experiences?

Cheers

What's a proficiency check for a ASES rating?
 
According to the CFI who did the check ride, they issue a new certificate with ASES (Light Sport) to replace my current Private Pilot, ASEL Certificate. I have no clue if he was correct. I presumed a temporary certificate would be issued until the plastic one is printed. Different than the tail wheel endorsement in my log book since that’s not a rating.

Cheers
 
No such thing as a sport pilot certificate? I really don’t know.

When I got my Tailwheel endorsement, nothing was sent to OKC, just a logbook endorsement. This ASES (whatever it is), I had to send a couple of forms signed by the CFI and the Checkride CFI to OKC.

Cheers
 
61.317 Is my sport pilot certificate issued with aircraft category and class ratings?
Your sport pilot certificate does not list aircraft category and class ratings. When you successfully pass the practical test for a sport pilot certificate, regardless of the light-sport aircraft privileges you seek, the FAA will issue you a sport pilot certificate without any category and class ratings. The FAA will provide you with a logbook endorsement for the category and class of aircraft in which you are authorized to act as pilot in command.
BWTHDIK
 
I guess the confusion is I have a Private Pilot Certificate but took the check in a light sport seaplane.

I suppose I’ll get a) sticker for the logbook or b) new PP certificate with ASES (SP) or maybe c) an SP certificate with nothing on it.

Ditto on BWTHDIK.

Typical POA thread:D

Cheers
 
Add in 61.303…

(iii) At least a recreational pilot certificate but not a rating for the category and class of light-sport aircraft you operate,

(A) That light-sport aircraft, only if you hold the endorsements required in §61.321 for its category and class,

(1) You must comply with the limitations in §61.315, except §61.315(c)(14) and, if a private pilot or higher, §61.315(c)(7).
 
To answer your original question, though…if you did the application in IACRA, they seem to be getting certificates out in well under 120 days. Not so much with paper applications, as we’ve had to get a few extensions for those.
 
To answer your original question, though…if you did the application in IACRA, they seem to be getting certificates out in well under 120 days. Not so much with paper applications, as we’ve had to get a few extensions for those.
I don’t think you can use iacra for sport pilot. My understanding is that it is still paper
 
I’ve not finished my sport pilot add on. But here is what my instructors certs looks like.
 

Attachments

  • C5DAB958-82FC-4757-B121-EB1F6E0F6A1A.jpeg
    C5DAB958-82FC-4757-B121-EB1F6E0F6A1A.jpeg
    85.8 KB · Views: 17
Today I got my new certificate. Not a paper one but a new plastic one with the following on the reverse with Wil and Orv. Same number as my “current”.

Private Pilot
Airplane Single Engine Land

English Proficient
Sport Pilot Endorsement(s) Airplane Single Engine Sea

So you DO get a new one for this endorsement, unlike Tailwheel or Complex Endorsements

Cheers
 
I've been rusty too long....feel out of the loop on this sports stuff....
so you took a seaplane ride but it was in a sport category. So you're not rated to then fly a certificated seaplane...like say a cub on floats? Was the checkride not on all the same stuff?
 
I've been rusty too long....feel out of the loop on this sports stuff....
so you took a seaplane ride but it was in a sport category. So you're not rated to then fly a certificated seaplane...like say a cub on floats? Was the checkride not on all the same stuff?

Took training in a SeaRey, a light sport seaplane. Then I took a proficiency check with a different CFI. Same stuff as would be in the checkride with a DPE. Assuming you pass, if it’s a CFI, you get an endorsement that allows you to fly any LSA Seaplane eg, J-3 or Champ on floats, SeaRey or Aventura II. If it’s a DPE, you get an ASES Rating allowing flight in any single engine Seaplane like a 170 on floats or a LSA SeaRey.

Cheers
 
A Sport Pilot can fly any aircraft that meets the LSA weight and performance limits, regardless of how it's certificated. So yes, he can fly a J-3 on floats.
 
I guess I would have thought that with a private you'd get private privileges at that level...but now I understand that the point is the check was with a CFI not a DPE
 
So you added sport pilot SES onto your private cert? It would have never occurred to me to do that.
 
So you added sport pilot SES onto your private cert? It would have never occurred to me to do that.

Up to you at least two places, Jack Brown’s or Flying Fish that I know of. Probably more like Icon Training Centers. $500=$700 less for a CFI Vs DPE. Since I will only use Sport Pilot privileges, easy choice for me.

Cheers
 
Last edited:
Back
Top