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#11
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According to AOPA CJ is correct.
http://www.aopa.org/members/files/topics/pic.html Any Pilot that is rated for the aircraft, meaning ASEL if the plane is single engine land, can log PIC time for the time he is sole manipulator of the controls. This is true whether or not he has a current medical, BFR or, if the plane meets the criteria, the endorsements required for high performance and/or complex aircraft. However, there must be a pilot in the plane that DOES meet all the requirements for the plane being flown. Typical FAR's...clear as mud! Chris Bob Moore wrote: "cjcampbell" wrote Pilot 1 logs PIC as sole manipulator of the controls. Pilot 2 logs PIC as a required crewmember acting as PIC. Pilot 2 could not log PIC if pilot 1 was current because then pilot 2 would not be a required crewmember. BS! CJ....The certification of the a/c does not require two pilots and the rules under which it is operated do not require two pilots. Pilot 2 logs NOTHING. Bob Moore |
#12
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Peter Duniho wrote:
Why wouldn't you? 'Cause I don't need the time for anything and I don't want the FAA asking questions about it if, for some reason, an inspector starts looking into my logbook at a later time. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
#13
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Mortimer Schnerd wrote:
Bob Moore wrote: "cjcampbell" wrote Pilot 1 logs PIC as sole manipulator of the controls. Pilot 2 logs PIC as a required crewmember acting as PIC. Pilot 2 could not log PIC if pilot 1 was current because then pilot 2 would not be a required crewmember. BS! CJ....The certification of the a/c does not require two pilots and the rules under which it is operated do not require two pilots. Pilot 2 logs NOTHING. Since Pilot #1 isn't current, isn't this analogous to letting one of the passengers handle the controls? Pilot #2 would be the only one current and therefore MUST be the PIC. Pilot #1 is effectively the passenger. If he wants to be more, he needs to get his BFR and / or medical current. Yes, Pilot #2 is *acting* as PIC, but that in itself does not allow him/her to log it as PIC. Hilton |
#14
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Chris wrote:
According to AOPA CJ is correct. http://www.aopa.org/members/files/topics/pic.html Any Pilot that is rated for the aircraft, meaning ASEL if the plane is single engine land, can log PIC time for the time he is sole manipulator of the controls. This is true whether or not he has a current medical, BFR or, if the plane meets the criteria, the endorsements required for high performance and/or complex aircraft. However, there must be a pilot in the plane that DOES meet all the requirements for the plane being flown. Typical FAR's...clear as mud! If you looked in Part 61, you would see that Part 61 with regards logging PIC is pretty darn clear, you just need to read it in B&W without trying to read between the lines. BTW: This AOPA text is exactly consistent with what Bob and I wrote and inconsistent with what CJ wrote. Hilton |
#15
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:qtAYe.10024$LV5.2323@trndny02... Why wouldn't you? 'Cause I don't need the time for anything and I don't want the FAA asking questions about it if, for some reason, an inspector starts looking into my logbook at a later time. Huh. IMHO the FAA, if they are looking into your logbook, is already asking questions. Assuming the flight was legal, and you met the logging requirements, you would have a good answer for the questions. But granted, if you don't care to have the time in your logbook, it's certainly your prerogative to decline to log the time. I'd say you're being overly cautious, but then lots of people tell me I'm overly cautious at times too. Far be it from me to call you wrong. ![]() Pete |
#16
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Scenario #1
Pilot A wants to accompany Pilot B on a cross country flight in a single engine, high performance aircraft. Pilot A is rated for the airplane, but does not have a current medical, high performance endorsement, or current biennial flight review. Pilot A will be practicing simulated instrument flying, wearing a view limited device and will be sole manipulator of the controls during the enroute portion of the flight. Pilot B meets all the requirements to be PIC and has agreed to be PIC and safety pilot during the flight. Under these circumstances, Pilot A may log PIC time and simulated instrument time, Pilot B may log PIC time, but not instrument time, since he/she is not operating the aircraft by reference to instruments (FAR 61.51). How can you read this and say that it is consistent with what you and Bob are saying. In the above scenario, Pilot A does not have a current medical, BFR or required endosements, but he can log the time spent as sole manipulator of the controls as PIC. Pilot B is current and has the required endorsements. Therefore he is a required crewmember and can log PIC. This seems to me more consistent with what CJ posted and the above scenario is very similar to the question in the orignal post. |
#17
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![]() Jack Brown wrote: Here's a variation on something that's been beaten to death: Situation - pilot 1's BFR ran out 2 months ago. Friend (Pilot 2) comes to visit and wants to go flying. It's Pilot 1's airplane (high wing) and he doesn't feel comfortable letting (low winger) Pilot 2 fly it so he does. Pilot 2 is "PIC" but Pilot 1 is sole manipulator of the controls. Who and how is time logged? jb First of all. Who is PIC? The definition of PIC is in the glossary in front. The PIC is the pilot who is "in charge of the flight". Since pilot 1 is in charge of the flight (it is HIS airplane AND he feels that pilot 2 is not qualified to fly it), then pilot 1 must be PIC. But he can't be PIC because he isn't under a current flight review. Pilot 2 could legally fly the airplane, by himself, if pilot 1 would let him and agree that he was competent (and if pilot 2 thought he was competent). And pilot 2 could be PIC with pilot 1 on the aircraft, if pilot 1 would let him. Not only can't they log it, they can't legally fly it either. Because the person who is FAA qualified to be PIC is not allowed to be PIC by the owner of the airplane. If the answer to "who is PIC?" is a contrivance to make the flight legal and doesn't meet the definition of a TRUE PIC, then that person is not really PIC. It would be akin to an airliner and neither the pilot nor copilot were current. But they happened to have a legally current and rated pilot onboard who could't really fly the plane. They can't put him in the cockpit and call him PIC and make the flight legal. It would be a "contrivance", done only to make the flight legal. He is not really PIC. To be PIC you have to BE THE PILOT IN CHARGE OF THE FLIGHT! |
#18
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wrote in message
ups.com... [...] How can you read this and say that it is consistent with what you and Bob are saying. He can say that, because it is. In the above scenario, Pilot A does not have a current medical, BFR or required endosements, but he can log the time spent as sole manipulator of the controls as PIC. True. As sole manipulator with the necessary category and class ratings, he gets to log the flight, whether he is qualified to act as PIC or not. Pilot B is current and has the required endorsements. Since he's acting as PIC, he'd better be, and he'd better have. Therefore he is a required crewmember Since Pilot A cannot act as PIC, yes...Pilot B is a required crewmember. and can log PIC. True. But not for the reasons you've stated so far. The only reason (in that scenario) that Pilot B is permitted to log the time is that they are acting as safety pilot. The question of who is acting as PIC is irrelevant. When flying in simulated instrument conditions, a safety pilot is required, and thus invokes the "more than one pilot is required under...the regulations under which the flight is conducted". Being a required crewmember is not sufficient. If one is not manipulating the controls, one must not only be a required crewmember, there must be more than one pilot required. Without the simulated instrument conditions, more than one pilot is NOT required, and thus the pilot acting as PIC, though he is certainly required (in a flight in which only one pilot is required), does not get to log the time as PIC flight time. This seems to me more consistent with what CJ posted It seems to you, apparently. But it's not. and the above scenario is very similar to the question in the orignal post. I'll grant you similar. But similar does not mean it is equivalent. Pete |
#19
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
... [...] The question of who is acting as PIC is irrelevant. And I really should clarify this: When I say "irrelevant", I don't mean it's irrelevant to the question at large. Simply that acting as PIC doesn't necessarily imply one can log PIC. The regulation that allows Pilot B to log PIC time *does* require that Pilot B be acting as PIC, so obviously it's relevant in that case. |
#20
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IBean wrote:
Scenario #1 Pilot A wants to accompany Pilot B on a cross country flight in a single engine, high performance aircraft. Pilot A is rated for the airplane, but does not have a current medical, high performance endorsement, or current biennial flight review. Pilot A will be practicing simulated instrument flying, wearing a view limited device and will be sole manipulator of the controls during the enroute portion of the flight. Pilot B meets all the requirements to be PIC and has agreed to be PIC and safety pilot during the flight. Under these circumstances, Pilot A may log PIC time and simulated instrument time, Pilot B may log PIC time, but not instrument time, since he/she is not operating the aircraft by reference to instruments (FAR 61.51). How can you read this and say that it is consistent with what you and Bob are saying. Because in my very initial post I wrote: "Pilot 1 logs all the time, Pilot 2 logs nothing - this assumes that it is all VFR, no hoodwork, that Pilot 2 has all the endorsements etc to be PIC, and that Pilot 1 is rated in the aircraft." I cannot repeat myself every post. Therefore, given those restrictions, Bob was correct, and since the original poster did not state restrictions or conditions, I assumed and stated VFR with no hoodwork. If you wanna use VFR with hood work, fine. Pilot A logs PIC time, and simulated instrument time, as well as complex and hi-performance as appropriate whether or not he/she has these endorsements. Pilot be logs PIC if he/she was acting as PIC (which they are in your example), or SIC if Pilot A was acting as PIC (with all the required stuff of course). Hilton |
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