http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-ox ... e-20915906
Well done, that Lad!... [smiley=thumbsup.gif]...!
Paul....
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(it's not his fault that EASA have brought along some idiocy), but...
Mind you, some of the new rules and regulations brought upon us by EASA are beyond belief anyway. For example, [glow=yellow,2,300]all military pilots have had almost all of their civil license accreditations removed[/glow] (a European standardisation of course). Yet they've allowed 14 yr olds solo.


I find that astonishing. However, being allowed to fly solo in the vicinity of the airfield doesn't make one a pilot.
It does make one captain of an airborne vehicle though. A lot of responsibility for such a young, potentially mentally quite immature, person.I assume that he will still be supervised by an instructor for some time yet in the same way as a student pilot in a powered aircraft.
You'd hope.I believe the minimum age for the first solo in a powered aircraft is 16 (actually 15 1/2) but the minimum age for a PPL is 17. It's not unusual to qualify for a PPL on one's 17th birthday.

I find that astonishing. However, being allowed to fly solo in the vicinity of the airfield doesn't make one a pilot.
It does make one captain of an airborne vehicle though. A lot of responsibility for such a young, potentially mentally quite immature, person.I assume that he will still be supervised by an instructor for some time yet in the same way as a student pilot in a powered aircraft.
You'd hope.
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Unconvinced. But then again, a lot of things that come out of Europe are unconvincing.


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I am constantly amazed by "youngsters", when it comes to flying...
..especially when I read of stories about the very young teen-age pilots flying highly complex single and multiple-engined military aircraft during WW II, following very little training!



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