Student Cert. Revoked

b2boma

Well-Known Member
A co-worker of mine has a student who had its student pilot cert revoked for stupid reasons (on the students part). He did his suspension, got a new cert. and started training again. My question is, does he have to complete a new written exam for the pvt? It's within the 24 months but does his suspension effect that? Thanks
 
I should think not. I don't know if the feds can revoke the results of the written but I imagine if the suspension was on his student pilot certificate only, then the written is fine as long as it has not been 24mos.
 
Your co-worker should have made it clear that the student was not to land on any taxiways or overfly his destination by a hundred miles, even if, as the student said, "All the cool pilots are doing it."
 
how the heck can the FAA 'revoke' a student certificate? whats to stop him from just walking into a different AME's office and getting a new one?
 
When the new app comes across the desk in okc, they'll get rightly mad, file criminal charges, and hit you with a really nice fine. I would not recomend defrauding the FAA on your application. It's just not worth it
 
Yeah I guess the guy went out flying with a buddy like a few days before his checkride and got busted.
 
When the new app comes across the desk in okc, they'll get rightly mad, file criminal charges, and hit you with a really nice fine. I would not recomend defrauding the FAA on your application. It's just not worth it

Revocation of your certificate doesn't mean you can't get a new certificate.
 
Your co-worker should have made it clear that the student was not to land on any taxiways or overfly his destination by a hundred miles, even if, as the student said, "All the cool pilots are doing it."

Freakin' awesome!

An instructor I work with recently had a student take his dad flying... his respose: "geeze man, I'm just doing this for fun, I don't take it all serious!"
 
Hmmm... really?
61.13(d)(2)

1 year after date of revocation you can get another certificate.

Yep, really.

The regulation you cite doesn't say a person can turn around and get another student certificate, which was the context in which you made your post. In fact, it says just the opposite.
 
You were adding things to my post that I never wrote. I never said immediate nor 'turn around' nor anything that could be construed as that.
 
You were adding things to my post that I never wrote. I never said immediate nor 'turn around' nor anything that could be construed as that.

I didn't say you said "immediate" or "turn around". I said "the context in which you made your post", and that certainly is "construed" as applying to the context in which you made your post.
 
An instructor I work with recently had a student take his dad flying... his respose: "geeze man, I'm just doing this for fun, I don't take it all serious!"
At that point I would just give him a copy of FSX with a thank you card attached and delete his number from my phone. But thats just me.
 
At that point I would just give him a copy of FSX with a thank you card attached and delete his number from my phone. But thats just me.

In today's litigious environment, that would be a very smart move. An instructor has enough hanging out on the line without adding a non compliant student to the risk factor.
 
Back to the original question. From FAA Order 2150.3B – the FAA Compliance and Enforcement Program:

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A revocation of a certificate means the certificate is no longer valid, and the holder may not exercise any of its privileges. Unlike a suspension, a certificate that has been revoked cannot be reinstated. A certificate holder whose certificate has been revoked may reapply for a new certificate, but an individual applying for an airman certificate must meet all the qualifications for the new certificate, including retaking all tests, whether written, oral, or practical. Any experience requirements for the new certificate may be met with experience obtained before the revocation of the original certificate. If an airman certificate has been revoked for less than one year, the FAA generally denies any application by that airman for a new certificate, and the airman has no appeal from that denial. (my emphasis)
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Now I'm confused. There aren't really any requirements for the student pilot certificate other than be at least 16 and speak English. The written's required for the private so would he have to retake the written if just his student cert was revoked? Thx
 
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