Doesn't need glasses but failed the medical?
#1
Gets Weekends Off
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Joined APC: Feb 2018
Position: *click click, click click* Time to do pilot sh*t.
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Doesn't need glasses but failed the medical?
Hi everyone,
My student went in to get his medical today and failed the eye portion. He went to the eye doctor the next day and the doctor said he doesn't need glasses. What does he have to do now. I'm at a lost....
My student went in to get his medical today and failed the eye portion. He went to the eye doctor the next day and the doctor said he doesn't need glasses. What does he have to do now. I'm at a lost....
#2
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Feb 2017
Position: ERJ-170
Posts: 521
There are several aspects to the "eye portion" but without more specifics maybe have the eye doctor fill out an FAA 8500-7 and take it to the AME?
#3
Gets Weekends Off
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Joined APC: Feb 2018
Position: *click click, click click* Time to do pilot sh*t.
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#4
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Joined APC: Jan 2011
Posts: 88
If it was the color portion of the test, which does indeed involve the eyes then there are other alternate tests that he could take, depending on the degree of color blindness, some are easier to pass than others. It is very important to try the alternate tests before doing the FAA test, since that one is final, if you fail it, you will never in your life fly solo at night.
When I went in for my test, the doc also did some eye test with letters/numbers and a straight line that crossed between a certain letter, and I had to tell him which one. I don't know what that test does, it was done in one of those machines where you stick your eyes via a visor of sorts, perhaps it was that one, it's hard to say.
When I went in for my test, the doc also did some eye test with letters/numbers and a straight line that crossed between a certain letter, and I had to tell him which one. I don't know what that test does, it was done in one of those machines where you stick your eyes via a visor of sorts, perhaps it was that one, it's hard to say.
#6
#7
When I went in for my test, the doc also did some eye test with letters/numbers and a straight line that crossed between a certain letter, and I had to tell him which one. I don't know what that test does, it was done in one of those machines where you stick your eyes via a visor of sorts, perhaps it was that one, it's hard to say.
#10
Does your student not speak adequate English to understand what is going on him/her self? I've never heard of an AME not explaining to a pilot what disqualifying defect they had.
It is possible it is totally unrelated to vision but your student is simply claiming that to avoid divulging to you what the real problem is.
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