Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation

Saturday, 05 July 2008
Home
Saturday, 05 July 2008
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Ask Me
Forum
Disclaimer
Privacy
Search
Links
OnLine Stores
Pilot Career
Becoming a Pilot
Female Pilots
Education
Medical Examination
Eyesight
Height
Age
Interviewing Process
Aptitude Tests
Flight Simulator
Training
Technical Questions
Professional Pilot
General
Licenses & Ratings
A320 Training Videos
Salary
Job Opportunities
Flying
Air Travel
Airways
Ditching
Dr JB Lim's Corner
Emergencies
ETOPS
Fear of Flying
Flying on the Boeing 777
Flying the Plane
Medical
Profession
Aviation
Airlines
Airplanes
Airports
Air Crash
Air Crash Investigations
Air Safety
Humor
B777 Photo/Routes/Seats
Video
Stories, Truths & Myths
Weather
Air Turbulence
Contrails
Crosswinds
Icings
Lightnings
Night Flights
Thunderstorms
Windshears

Click Here for Searches on Weather News & Forecast

Google
 


Can one who is deaf be a pilot?

Written by Capt Lim, on 16-11-2005

Published in : Pilot Career, Medical Examination

Hi Capt Lim,

I am profoundly deaf since I was 5. I am now 36 years old. I have just learned that a deaf can obtain a private license, or even commercial license.

My question is: for pilot career, what kind of job can a deaf pilot do for the corporate world?

I was hoping that I could fly packages to rural airport for FedEX or UPS or something like that. What is that position called?

Happy flying,

Erik

Hi Erik,

While a deaf is not barred from flying, they are restricted to a special pilot*s certificate with this endorsement, "Not Valid for Flights Requiring the Use of Radio?.

In the US, the FAA can grant you a pilot certificate in one of the five categories of aircraft: airplane, rotorcraft, glider, powered-lift, or lighter-than-air.

The
FAA FAQ states that a deaf pilot can obtain a student pilot certificate, recreational pilot certificate, private pilot certificate, and, on a limited basis, a commercial pilot certificate, for example, agricultural aircraft operations, banner towing operations, or any operation which does not require radio communication. With new interface technology for incockpit receipt of weather information and digital communication, additional pilot certificates may be available to deaf pilots in the future.

So, as you can see, at the moment, you will not be able to pass a full Class I Medical certificate in order to fly commercially with any airlines as a cargo pilot for FedEX, UPS or even in the corporate operations. You may however fly on a limited basis, as a crop duster, some banner towing operations or any operations that does not require you to use a radio transmitter or receiver.

If you fly for FedEx or UPS, you would be known as a cargo pilot but you will still operate under the same license as a normal passenger pilot that require a Class 1 Medical Certificate.

Save this to del.icio.us

Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 
 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.5 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
 
Next >

Free Page Rank Tool

Latest Comments
A successful SIA Cadet Pilot...
Sources for Aptitude Test
"My advice to aspiring candidates is -...
01/07/08 08:45 More...
By Ng Liang Quan

A successful aspiring pilot...
What's 33x45
Hi there, May I ask what's...
01/07/08 08:17 More...
By Ng Liang Quan

Is it possible for a...
Further elaboration
Well, other airline one can consider...
01/07/08 04:54 More...
By FO Chang

Did the pilots fall asleep?
AIR INDIA?....
I'm flying Air. India next month...from...
01/07/08 00:58 More...
By Deborah Hofsoy

Did the pilots fall asleep?
Another such incident in air india
Dear Captain Lim Did the air...
27/06/08 17:43 More...
By farook

© 2008 Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.