russp wrote:... I think it's ridiculous that there are different requirements simply based on what licence you got and when you got it. ... Why should someone flying a 160mph microlight have a different revalidation to someone in a cessna with a lesser performance?
Absolutely! Couldn't agree more! It's ridiculous that the fast, expensive, heavy machines should ever be called microlights.
The following is an extract from a letter I sent to Flyer which was kindly published in September 1997 when it was proposed to increase the microlight weight limit from 390kg to 450kg:
"I agree with Ronnie Faux in the Summer Special issue of Flyer that increasing the weight limit on microlights poses a threat to the future of microlighting.
Heavier aircraft are already available to those who wish to fly them, they just need a group-A licence to fly them. Those pilots wishing to fly further, faster and higher should surely be trained to the same standards as pilots already doing that in C152s etc. The blurring of the boundaries between microlight and light aircraft classifications can only lead to pressure to raise the training and medical requirements for microlights until the distinction is effectively lost."<sob>
I hesitate to write this in case the CAA haven't already thought of it, but I predict the next to go will be the allowance that NPPL pilots who fly only single-seat microlights are not required to have the hour under instruction to maintain their licence validity.
The only positive thing I can draw from this sorry saga is that I have been privileged to live and fly, and even briefly earn a meagre living, through the heyday of microlighting.
[edit] PS. My last flight with an instructor was 18 months ago.