- (a) General. A person who applies for a recreational pilot certificate must receive and log ground training from an authorized instructor or complete a home-study course on the aeronautical knowledge areas of paragraph (b) of this section that apply to the aircraft category and class rating sought.
(b) Aeronautical knowledge areas.
- (1) Applicable Federal Aviation Regulations of this chapter that relate to recreational pilot privileges, limitations, and flight operations;
- (2) Accident reporting requirements of the National Transportation Safety Board;
- (3) Use of the applicable portions of the “Aeronautical Information Manual” and FAA advisory circulars;
- (4) Use of aeronautical charts for VFR navigation using pilotage with the aid of a magnetic compass;
- (5) Recognition of critical weather situations from the ground and in flight, windshear avoidance, and the procurement and use of aeronautical weather reports and forecasts;
- (6) Safe and efficient operation of aircraft, including collision avoidance, and recognition and avoidance of wake turbulence;
- (7) Effects of density altitude on takeoff and climb performance;
- (8) Weight and balance computations;
- (9) Principles of aerodynamics, powerplants, and aircraft systems;
- (10) Stall awareness, spin entry, spins, and spin recovery techniques, if applying for an airplane single-engine rating;
- (11) Aeronautical decision making and judgment; and
(12) Preflight action that includes—
- (i) How to obtain information on runway lengths at airports of intended use, data on takeoff and landing distances, weather reports and forecasts, and fuel requirements; and
- (ii) How to plan for alternatives if the planned flight cannot be completed or delays are encountered.
[Docket 25910, 62 FR 16298, Apr. 4, 1997; Amdt. 61-103, 62 FR 40902, July 30, 1997]