Could someone explain the near-mythical "unlimited type rating" in detail? I've heard about it, but details are incredible scarce - to the point that most people aren't even aware it exists - so it is hard to find any concrete information about it. (To the point that I'm not exactly sure how to refer to it. Unlimited type rating? "All classes and categories" authorization?
[1] "All makes and models"? "Authorized Experimental Aircraft"?
[2]) My understanding is that part of the reason for that is that the FAA no longer issues such certifications.
[3] For the same reason, pretty much all of the references I've found mention that only a double digit number of pilots still hold one. So, I'm also curious who in particular still has one.
Even what exactly it allows is difficult to determine and it seems like there is some confusion even among pilots. The way I've heard it explained, it allows a pilot to fly any piston powered aircraft - if they can demonstrate proficiency in three randomly chosen aircraft.
[4] I've also seen it compared to a letter of authorization.
[2] I know there is some relationship between LOAs and type ratings, but I've never fully understood that either. I thought that LOAs were more or less just a temporary type rating, but as someone who is neither a pilot nor a mechanic, I am under no illusions this may be incorrect.
Given the way that it has been characterized, unlimited type ratings seem similar to the
history of limited type certificates. That is to say, they are both legacies from an earlier time – the post-World War II period – when aviation regulations and enforcement was much more lax and that as time has gone on the FAA has attempted to sunset them.
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