Complete Exam Prep Companion 2026/2027
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1a.1. What are the eligibility requirements for a Private Pilot (Airplane) Certificate?
(14 CFR 61.103)
a. Be at least 17 years of age.
b. Be able to read, speak, write, and understand the English language.
c. Hold at least a current third-class medical certificate.
d. Received the required ground and flight training endorsements.
e. Meet the applicable aeronautical experience requirements.
f. Pass the required knowledge and practical tests.
Exam Tip: The evaluator may ask you to demonstrate that you're current and eligible to
take the practical test. When preparing for your practical test, verify that you have the
required hours, that you're current, and don't forget to double-check all of your
endorsements (especially the 90-day solo flight endorsement).
Make sure you have totaled all the logbook columns and that the entries make sense.
1a.2. What are the requirements to remain current as a private pilot? (14 CFR
61.56, 61.57)
a. Within the preceding 24 months, a pilot must have accomplished a flight review given
in an aircraft for which that pilot is rated by an authorized instructor and received a
logbook endorsement certifying that the person has satisfactorily completed the review.
b. To carry passengers, a pilot must have made, within the preceding 90 days:
• Three takeoffs and landings as the sole manipulator of flight controls of an aircraft of
the same category, class, and, if a type rating is required, type.
• If the aircraft is a tailwheel airplane, the landings must have been made to a full stop in
an airplane with a tailwheel.
• If operations are to be conducted during the period beginning 1 hour after sunset and
1 hour before sunrise, with passengers on board, the pilot-in-command (PIC) must
have, within the preceding 90 days, made at least three takeoffs and three landings to a
full stop during that period in an aircraft of the same category, class, and type (if a type
is required) of aircraft to be used.
Note: Takeoffs and landings required by this regulation may be accomplished in a flight
simulator or flight training device that is approved by the administrator and used in
accordance with an approved course conducted by a certificated training center.
, 1a.3. You have not kept up with logging each of your recent flights. Are you in
violation of any regulation?
(14 CFR 61.51)
No. You're only required to document and record the training and aeronautical
experience used to meet the requirements for a certificate, rating, or flight review and
the aeronautical experience required for meeting the recent flight experience
requirements.
1a.4. You're flying in a single-engine, high-performance, complex airplane. You
hold a Private Pilot Certificate with an airplane single-engine land rating, but you
don't have a high-performance or complex airplane endorsement. Your friend,
who has those endorsements, is acting as PIC for the flight. Can you log PIC time
for the time you act as sole manipulator of the controls?
Explain. (14 CFR 61.31, 61.51)
Yes, 14 CFR §61.51 governs the logging of PIC time and states that a sport,
recreational, private, commercial, or airline transport pilot may log PIC time for the time
during which that pilot is "sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the
pilot is rated or has privileges."
Note: This means you can log PIC time, but you cannot act as PIC.
For pilots to act as PIC, they must be properly rated in the aircraft and authorized to
conduct the flight, which would include having the required endorsements for complex
and high-performance airplanes as required by 14 CFR §61.31.
1a.5. Explain the difference between being current and being proficient. (FAA-H-
8083-2, FAA-P-8740-36)
Being current means that a pilot has accomplished the minimum
FAA regulatory requirements within a specific time period and can exercise the
privileges of their certificate. It means that you're legal to make a flight, but it does not
necessarily mean that you're proficient or competent to make that flight. Being proficient
means that a pilot is capable of conducting a flight with a high degree of competence; it
requires that the pilot have a wide range of knowledge and skills. Being proficient is not
about just being legal in terms of the regulations but about being smart and safe in
terms of pilot experience and proficiency.
1a.6. How will establishing a personal minimums checklist reduce risk? (FAA-H-
8083-25)
Professional pilots live by the numbers, and so should you.
Pre-established numbers can make it a lot easier to come to a smart go/no-go or
diversion decision, than would the vague sense that you probably can deal with the
conditions you face at any given time.
A written set of personal minimums also makes it easier to explain tough cancelation or
diversion decisions to passengers who are, after all, trusting their lives to your
aeronautical skill and judgment.
1a.7. The airplane you normally rent has been grounded due to an intermittent
electrical problem. You ask to be scheduled in another airplane. During preflight
of the new airplane, you discover that it has avionics you're unfamiliar with.
Should you go ahead and depart on your VFR flight? (FAA-H-8083-2)
Pilot familiarity with all equipment is critical in optimizing both safety and efficiency. If a
pilot is unfamiliar with any aircraft system, this will add to workload and can contribute to