Aviation Maintenance Technician School

DME Exam Connection at Thrust Institute of Maintenance

When you graduate from Thrust Institute of Maintenance, the school connects you directly with a Designated Mechanic Examiner (DME) to schedule your FAA A&P certification exams. Most A&P schools don’t do this.

Why This Matters

After completing an FAA Part 147 program, you need to pass three types of exams to earn your Airframe and Powerplant certificates: written, oral, and practical.

The oral and practical exams must be administered by a Designated Mechanic Examiner, an individual authorized by the FAA to test and certify applicants.

Finding a DME on your own can be a frustrating process.

DMEs are independent examiners with limited availability. Some have wait times of weeks or months. Graduates of other programs are often left to search for an available examiner themselves, which delays their certification and their ability to start working.

Thrust Institute student

How Thrust Institute Helps You with Your DME Exam

Thrust Institute of Maintenance Students

The Typical Experience at Other Schools

At many A&P programs, graduation day is the last day the school is involved. You get your completion certificate and a handshake. Finding a DME, scheduling the exam, and navigating the process is entirely on you.

That gap between finishing school and actually getting tested is where momentum dies for a lot of students. Some wait months. Some never complete the process. Thrust Institute eliminates that gap by building the DME connection into the program.