hotairballoonist Posted September 4, 2015 Report Share Posted September 4, 2015 Does all your ingraining time count. The Following is corrispondence from the FAA to Pete Asp. U.S. Departmentof TransportationFederal AviationAdministrationOffice of the Chief Counsel 800 Independence Ave., S.W.Washington, D.C. 20591JUt 2.8 101>Mr. Peter H. AspW1341 County Road BSullivan, WI 53178Dear Mr. Asp:This is in response to your letter of August 4,2014, requesting a legal interpretation of 14 Codeof Federal Regulations § 61.129(h)(4), as it pertains to counting training time towards acommercial pilot certificate with a balloon rating. This letter corrects the letter of interpretationdated May 12,2015, and strikes that letter from the Federal Aviation Administration database.Section 61. 129(h) specifies the aeronautical experience required for a commercial pilotcertificate with a balloon rating. While this provision does not specify the timeframe that trainingtoward a commercial pilot certificate may begin to be logged, § 61.123 stipulates the eligibilityrequirements to apply for a commercial pilot certificate including the requirement to hold at leasta private pilot certificate.An applicant's eligibility for a commercial pilot certificate is assessed on the date the personapplies for the practical test, not the date that the pilot begins training for that certificate. Assuch, a pilot is permitted to log training time towards a commercial pilot certificate prior toobtaining a private pilot certificate. An applicant for a commercial pilot certificate must satisfythe aeronautical experience requirements of § 61.129 and be trained and evaluated at thecommercial pilot level when training for the commercial pilot certificate. See LegalInterpretation to Richard Theriault, October 8, 2010.You also asked if a person can take a knowledge test for a commercial pilot certificate beforeearning his private pilot certificate. Any person may take the commercial knowledge test at anytime, but the test results are only valid for 24 months, in accordance with § 61.39(a)(l). In yourletter, you pointed out a contradiction between the language in § 61. 129(h)(4) and the languageof § 61.129(h)(4)(ii)( . Section 61. 129(h)(4) requires, "10 hours of flight training that includesat least 10 training flights with an authorized instructor in balloons ... on the areas of operationlisted in part 61. 127( (8) of this part." In § 61.129(h)(4)(ii)( , a person applying for acommercial pilot certificate with a lighter-than-air category and a balloon class rating must log,"Two solo flights in a balloon with an airborne heater on the appropriate areas of operation."You are correct that these two paragraphs appear to be contradictory. However, the intent of theregulation is that the two solo flights can be part of the 10 hours of flight training, but not the 10flights conducted with an authorized instructor. We have forwarded this issue to the General Aviation and Commercial Division of the Flight Standards Service (AFS-800) for considerationof action to clarify this regulation.I hope that this response has been helpful to you. If you have additional questions or requiremore information, please contact my staff at (202) 267-3073. This response was prepared byNeal O'Hara, an Attorney in the Regulations Division of the Office of the Chief Counsel, andwas coordinated with the General Aviation and Commercial Division of the Flight StandardsService.Sincerely,Lorelei PeterActing Assistant Chief Counsel for Regulations Download this file. A Balloon Site built by Balloonists for Balloonist's Become a Member Today Jeff A Thompson. Admin@HotAirBalloonist.com 407-421-9322 ? 44 year LTA pilot, BFA member since 1977, BFA Level DA-8, Ed Yost Master Pilot. 6500 flights, 5650 Flight Hours Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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