I keep ending up w/ random questions on the GA side so figured I'd just start this thread. I know HH-60H had another similar thread, but the search is getting overwhelmed...
Question 1: Assuming the cost difference is minimal, is there some reason I should get a Class 2 medical over a Class 3? I don't plan on using my commercial in the act of flying right now. My old class 3 has long since expired and I'm trying to requal it w/a doc in town.
More questions to follow, I'm sure.
If you are getting a civilian medical I assume you plan on doing some civilian flying. I doubt the FAA will find anything "new" with you that a flight doc would not have found. I'm a medical nightmare with plenty of medical headaches when it comes to paperwork (FAA and Navy). One scenario that could be a problem, like mentioned above, is that the FAA has a similar process to waivers. You maybe good to go in the Navy with a waiver for something rare, but to an Aviation Medical Examiner you being a pilot may not calm their worries.
If you have a condition which requires special attention, the AME can grant the medical if they feel it is a non issue. If they feel they can't medically make that recommendation they forward the medical application to a regional office. If the FAA AMEs there feel that can't approve the application then it goes to the head office in Oklahoma City. Then the head docs look it over and make a decision. It took me about 3 months to get my medical from Oklahoma. With the medical was a nice letter explaining 14 CFR 61.53.
If you want to get a medical, I recommend finding a flight doc who is also an AME. There is a new process where you fill out the medical application online (
https://medxpress.faa.gov/). It is pretty slick and in the end all you do is bring in a confirmation number and the AME looks up the application online (I also brought a paper copy). If you're like me and are a medical nightmare a Navy flight doc is an angel. You go in to them, they see your upchit and give you the 2nd/3rd class. The medical standards, as you can imagine, are lower for a 3rd class.
I would recommend getting the 2nd class. Why? The 1st class takes a little more, but I'm confident than if you can get a 2nd class you'd be able to get a 1st class. The difference between a 3rd and 1st is much wider. Once you have a Navy flight doc give you a 2nd class your past issues are history. Later in life you go a civilian AME and fill out the form with any issue you have had. Under the remarks section where you have to explain why you answered yes to a laundry list of questions you just write "previously reported" and the AME probably won't even ask about it. Previously reported means the whole FAA medical process decided you were good to go.
Clear as mud?