Correction, on re-reading the rule 50 nm, straight line
point to point.
(ii) For the purpose of meeting the aeronautical experience
requirements (except for a rotorcraft category rating), for
a private pilot certificate (except for a powered parachute
category rating), a commercial pilot certificate, or an
instrument rating, or for the purpose of exercising
recreational pilot privileges (except in a rotorcraft) under
§61.101 (c), time acquired during a flight-
(A) Conducted in an appropriate aircraft;
(B) That includes a point of landing that was at least a
straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles from
the original point of departure; and
(C) That involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage,
electronic navigation aids, radio aids, or other navigation
systems to navigate to the landing point.
"Jim Macklin" wrote
in message news

4pNg.22494$SZ3.16989@dukeread04...
| 61.65
| (d) Aeronautical experience. A person who applies for an
| instrument rating must have logged the following:
|
| (1) At least 50 hours of cross-country flight time as
pilot
| in command, of which at least 10 hours must be in
airplanes
| for an instrument-airplane rating; and
|
| (2) A total of 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument
| time on the areas of operation of this section, to
include-
|
| (i) At least 15 hours of instrument flight training from
an
| authorized instructor in the aircraft category for which
the
| instrument rating is sought;
|
| (ii) At least 3 hours of instrument training that is
| appropriate to the instrument rating sought from an
| authorized instructor in preparation for the practical
test
| within the 60 days preceding the date of the test;
|
| (iii) For an instrument-airplane rating, instrument
training
| on cross- country flight procedures specific to airplanes
| that includes at least one cross-country flight in an
| airplane that is performed under IFR, and consists of-
|
| (A) A distance of at least 250 nautical miles along
airways
| or ATC-directed routing;
|
| (B) An instrument approach at each airport; and
|
| (C) Three different kinds of approaches with the use of
| navigation systems;
|
|
|
| Cross country is defined for pilots appling for a pilot
| certificate, time that will count toward an instrument
| rating does not have to meet the later requirement for a
| commercial or ATP certificate. All you student pilot
cross
| country time that left one airport and landed some place
| else counts for the IR. Do a touch and go on an approach
| and it is a cross country.
|
|
|
|
| --
| James H. Macklin
| ATP,CFI,A&P
|
|
| wrote in message
|
oups.com...
|| Hi all.
||
|| A quick question about getting the Instrument rating: you
| have to have
|| 50 hours of cross-country pilot-in-command time, right?
| How is
|| cross-country time defined for this purpose? I couldn't
| find anything
|| in the FAR AIM that defines it. I guess maybe it is the
| same as the
|| definition for the Private, which I believe is flying to
| an airport at
|| least 50nm from the start point.
||
|| Does anyone know for sure? Also do you have to land at
| another airport
|| for it to be cross-country or do you just have to go
| there?
||
|| If anyone has the precise definition I'd appreciate it.
||
|| Thanks
||
|| Tom
||
|
|