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I've never heard of someone
having to go up with an inspector for their CFI Initial--DE's have always worked just fine.
I highly doubt that it comes down to district or state, since the regs put out by the FAA are generally nation-wide.
The only benefit to going up with an FAA Inspector is you do not have to pay them whereas a DE will want 350-450 for a ride.
I've seen some DEs charge 550 for a CFI-Initial ride.
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Thats the funny thing about the FAA. The Federal government decrees that airspace and aviation in general is their turf and not to be messed with locally to promote uniformity nationwide. So logically, you'd think that the FAA itself would follow along with this whole idea of standardization, but alas, it is not the case. Call up the local FSDO and ask a question on an obscure reg. Then call up the FSDO down the road and ask the same question. 9 times out of 10, you'll probably get a different interpretation. Likewise, ask a FSDO whether or not you can do a CFI initial with a DPE....some say yes, others say no. Some like Ft. Lauderdale say they'll allow you to go to a DPE, so long as they choose the DPE. Although they must all enforce one set of regulations, how they go about doing it can vary quite a bit.
Now in all fariness towards the FAA, these policies aren't all meaningless and archaic. In general, ALL FSDOs would like to do ALL CFI initial rides. In reality some just can't cope with the sheer numbers of applicants; they only have so many Inpsectors with so much time. This is one reason why this "Must have taken a checkride with the FSDO" requirement annoys the hell out of me. Some will just tell you to find a DPE....or wait several months before they get to you (hey, it's got to be given free to anyone, but who said it had to be done in a timely manner?!).
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Well, you do know that any government operation, by law of nature, is inherently
streamlined by default, don't you?