FG1D Pilot wrote:
One has to go through training and a check ride. The training consists of ground school and cockpit checkouts. Then you have to demonstrate your flying skills in the back seat of a T-6. If you can do that, you can fly just about anything. Some of us have a "Unlimited Letter of authority ( LOA ). This was given in the past, (but no longer) to pilots that qualify in 3 or more "piston powered, Experimental Aircraft over 900hp. If you were lucky enough to get one of these, all that is required is a cockpit check out and off you go. The theory was, if you went through all of that to qualify in 3 aircraft, why make you do the same thing over again. But the FAA decided that they liked making pilots go through all that again and again. Now you have to go through the complete training if you don't have the Unlimited LOA.
Mudge,
Same goes for single seat jet warbird fighters as Doug outlined for piston fighters. Get dual instruction in a two-seat trainer--an aircraft the FAA accepts as comparable and demonstrate proficiency in it. Once you've satisfied the instructor, the examiner watches you fly the single seater from the ground for your checkride. In the military, an examiner would fly off your wing and observe--anyone ever get an LOA or experimental type with the examiner flying off your wing? If you've bought that shiny F-86, get one of your friends to loan you a T-33 (sorta like loaning out your wife or girlfriend) and get instruction in it. During ground training, the instructor would cover differences between the jets like swept wing aerodynamics, handling, emergency procedures, limitation, "gotchas, systems, engine operation, approach/landing/aerobatic/cruise/stall/takeoff speeds etc. With flaps retracted, the approach speeds and pitch attitude of a T-33 is pretty close to an F-86 with flaps fully extended for approach/landing training; The engines behave similarly with slow spool up and the philosophy of operation the same in general. Once you've got the T-33 operation down and demonstrated sufficient knowledge of the F-86 and differences, you're signed off for the checkride and your first flight in the Sabre!