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657 

Federal Aviation Administration, DOT 

§ 145.59 

United States is effective from the date 
of issue until the last day of the 12th 
month after the date of issue unless 
the repair station surrenders the cer-
tificate and the FAA accepts it for can-
cellation, or the FAA suspends or re-
vokes it. The FAA may renew the cer-
tificate or rating for 24 months if the 
repair station has operated in compli-
ance with the applicable requirements 
of part 145 within the preceding certifi-
cate duration period. 

(c) A certificated repair station lo-

cated outside the United States that 
applies for a renewal of its repair sta-
tion certificate must— 

(1) Submit its request for renewal no 

later than 30 days before the repair sta-
tion’s current certificate expires. If a 
request for renewal is not made within 
this period, the repair station must fol-
low the application procedures in 
§ 145.51. 

(2) Send its request for renewal to the 

FAA office that has jurisdiction over 
the certificated repair station. 

(3) Show that the fee prescribed by 

the FAA has been paid. 

(d) The holder of an expired, surren-

dered, suspended, or revoked certifi-
cate must return it to the FAA. 

[Doc. No. FAA–1999–5836, 66 FR 41117, Aug. 6, 
2001, as amended by Amdt. 145–30, 79 FR 
46984, Aug. 12, 2014] 

§ 145.57 Amendment to or transfer of 

certificate. 

(a) A repair station certificate holder 

applying for a change to its certificate 
must submit a request in a format ac-
ceptable to the Administrator. A 
change to the certificate must include 
certification in compliance with 
§ 145.53(c) or (d), if not previously sub-
mitted. A certificate change is nec-
essary if the certificate holder— 

(1) Changes the name or location of 

the repair station, or 

(2) Requests to add or amend a rat-

ing. 

(b) If the holder of a repair station 

certificate sells or transfers its assets 
and the new owner chooses to operate 
as a repair station, the new owner must 
apply for an amended or new certifi-
cate in accordance with § 145.51. 

[Doc. No. FAA–2006–26408, 79 FR 46984, Aug. 
12, 2014] 

§ 145.59 Ratings. 

The following ratings are issued 

under this subpart: 

(a) 

Airframe ratings. 

(1) 

Class 1: 

Com-

posite construction of small aircraft. 

(2) 

Class 2: 

Composite construction of 

large aircraft. 

(3) 

Class 3: 

All-metal construction of 

small aircraft. 

(4) 

Class 4: 

All-metal construction of 

large aircraft. 

(b) 

Powerplant ratings. 

(1) 

Class 1: 

Re-

ciprocating engines of 400 horsepower 
or less. 

(2) 

Class 2: 

Reciprocating engines of 

more than 400 horsepower. 

(3) 

Class 3: 

Turbine engines. 

(c) 

Propeller ratings. 

(1) 

Class 1: 

Fixed- 

pitch and ground-adjustable propellers 
of wood, metal, or composite construc-
tion. 

(2) 

Class 2: 

Other propellers, by make. 

(d) 

Radio ratings. 

(1) 

Class 1: 

Commu-

nication equipment. Radio transmit-
ting and/or receiving equipment used in 
an aircraft to send or receive commu-
nications in flight, regardless of carrier 
frequency or type of modulation used. 
This equipment includes auxiliary and 
related aircraft interphone systems, 
amplifier systems, electrical or elec-
tronic intercrew signaling devices, and 
similar equipment. This equipment 
does not include equipment used for 
navigating or aiding navigation of air-
craft, equipment used for measuring al-
titude or terrain clearance, other 
measuring equipment operated on 
radio or radar principles, or mechan-
ical, electrical, gyroscopic, or elec-
tronic instruments that are a part of 
communications radio equipment. 

(2) 

Class 2: 

Navigational equipment. A 

radio system used in an aircraft for en 
route or approach navigation. This 
does not include equipment operated 
on radar or pulsed radio frequency 
principles, or equipment used for meas-
uring altitude or terrain clearance. 

(3) 

Class 3: 

Radar equipment. An air-

craft electronic system operated on 
radar or pulsed radio frequency prin-
ciples. 

(e) 

Instrument ratings. 

(1) 

Class 1: 

Me-

chanical. A diaphragm, bourdon tube, 
aneroid, optical, or mechanically driv-
en centrifugal instrument used on air-
craft or to operate aircraft, including