Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
RaulDuke1224 wrote:Nope, those fleets are completely separate. Nobody is dual qualified other than the 7ER fleet. And, additionally, those pilots are not certified on the 767-400 either.
T54A wrote:RaulDuke1224 wrote:Nope, those fleets are completely separate. Nobody is dual qualified other than the 7ER fleet. And, additionally, those pilots are not certified on the 767-400 either.
Why not, it’s considered a common type rating (or whatever the correct term is)?
T54A wrote:RaulDuke1224 wrote:Nope, those fleets are completely separate. Nobody is dual qualified other than the 7ER fleet. And, additionally, those pilots are not certified on the 767-400 either.
Why not, it’s considered a common type rating (or whatever the correct term is)?
T54A wrote:RaulDuke1224 wrote:Nope, those fleets are completely separate. Nobody is dual qualified other than the 7ER fleet. And, additionally, those pilots are not certified on the 767-400 either.
Why not, it’s considered a common type rating (or whatever the correct term is)?
Starlionblue wrote:T54A wrote:RaulDuke1224 wrote:Nope, those fleets are completely separate. Nobody is dual qualified other than the 7ER fleet. And, additionally, those pilots are not certified on the 767-400 either.
Why not, it’s considered a common type rating (or whatever the correct term is)?
As AirKevin says, AFAIK it is not a common rating in FAA-land.
Of course, if a US carrier wanted them to be common rating and pushed/paid for the paperwork and admin, maybe they would be a common rating in FAA-land as well. Not sure about the politics and who pays for what exactly.
N1120A wrote:The A330 and A350 are separate type ratings in the US. They could have pilots rated on both, but would have to keep them current on both.
The 764 is the same type rating as the other 767/757s. Delta just had a silly legacy contact term that separates the 764 out. No idea if the new contract changes that.
Max Q wrote:Starlionblue wrote:T54A wrote:
Why not, it’s considered a common type rating (or whatever the correct term is)?
As AirKevin says, AFAIK it is not a common rating in FAA-land.
Of course, if a US carrier wanted them to be common rating and pushed/paid for the paperwork and admin, maybe they would be a common rating in FAA-land as well. Not sure about the politics and who pays for what exactly.
The 767-400 is covered by the same type rating as all other 757/67 sub types
It just requires a differences course
Not sure about United but at Continental we flew the 757-200/300 and 767-200 and -400 with the same group of pilots
I know Delta keeps the 764 separate but that’s a self imposed contract/ pay requirement, nothing to do with FAA certification