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#1
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"Hilton" wrote in message
ink.net... David Brooks wrote: Saturday afternoon I met my new instructor; Plan A was to do the day and night VFR duals back to back, and plan B was just to do the day. Due to the interesting weather, we came up with this: Paine to Tacoma (repositioning flight), start the clock and a new line in the logbook, Tacoma to Blaine (103nm), back to Paine (2.2 hours from Tacoma to Paine). Your "original point of departure" remains Paine - the way you log it makes no difference. Your CFI should know better. I'm sure it was a fun flight though. Hmmm - Lynch's FAQ does seem to permit the interpretation of a separate repositioning flight, although the wording is a little truncated (see around page 8 of the latest update). In practice the repositioning leg was a specifically useful part of the whole training experience. -- David Brooks |
#2
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The 5 P rule...
ya know, it isn't like there are tens of thousands of FAA inspectors and you have no idea who will do your check ride... The vast majority of the inspectors want the applicant to pass the check ride...Why not dial up the fsdo ahead of time and talk to the man and sketch your plans for the various required items and see if he agrees with your intent... denny Your "original point of departure" remains Paine - the way you log it makes no difference. Your CFI should know better. I'm sure it was a fun flight though. |
#3
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David Brooks wrote:
Hmmm - Lynch's FAQ does seem to permit the interpretation of a separate repositioning flight, although the wording is a little truncated (see around page 8 of the latest update). In practice the repositioning leg was a specifically useful part of the whole training experience. Me thinks your 'repositioning leg' was a way to get around an FAR requirement. ![]() I'm giving you a great reason to go flying! I was shown an FAA doc describing just this issue during my Instrument Checkride by the DE. Prior to the checkride, I had (correctly) corrected my logbook to *not* count XCs I had logged where I did SJC-PAO-MRY-SJC (SJC-MRY 50nm, and PAO-MRY 50nm) - these are NOT 50nm XCs. I went and did a little more XC flying to satisfy the FAR. I'll try find the doc on the web. Hilton |
#4
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"Hilton" wrote in message
hlink.net... Me thinks your 'repositioning leg' was a way to get around an FAR requirement. Did you read the FAQ he is referring to? It specifically calls out a repositioning leg as a valid way to alter the "original point of departure". I'm giving you a great reason to go flying! He flew farther *with* the repositioning leg than he would have had he just flown 100 NM from PAE. [...] Prior to the checkride, I had (correctly) corrected my logbook to *not* count XCs I had logged where I did SJC-PAO-MRY-SJC (SJC-MRY 50nm, and PAO-MRY 50nm) - these are NOT 50nm XCs. If you logged those as single flights, then you were right to remove them from your XC total. However, it would have been perfectly legitimate to log the PAE-MRY leg as an individual flight, and count it as a XC flight. Per the Part 61 FAQ, the SJC-PAO leg could have been considered a "repositioning" leg and would not have invalidated the qualification of the next leg as a XC. Pete |
#5
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Peter Duniho wrote:
Hilton wrote: Me thinks your 'repositioning leg' was a way to get around an FAR requirement. Did you read the FAQ he is referring to? It specifically calls out a repositioning leg as a valid way to alter the "original point of departure". You refering to the FAQ that has more errors than Janet Jackson's clothing? ![]() If you logged those as single flights, then you were right to remove them from your XC total. However, it would have been perfectly legitimate to log the PAE-MRY leg as an individual flight, and count it as a XC flight. Per the Part 61 FAQ, the SJC-PAO leg could have been considered a "repositioning" leg and would not have invalidated the qualification of the next leg as a XC. The intent was a round-robbin flight. The start and ending point was the same - it was not a repositioning flight unless I was specifically tring to get around the FARs. For example, if the FAA wants me to go on a long 100nm XC, the intent is that I go far away from my 'home base' to gain additional experience in weather, flight planning, etc etc etc. To first fly 49nm north, then 51nm is not at all what the FAA intended, nor does it give you the aeronatical experience required by the FAA. Moreover, it makes a mockery of every mention of "original point of departure" in the FARs. That's just my opinion. I do believe we need some official FAA document stating one or the other, and no, the SuperBowl-FAQ doesn't cut it. ![]() Hilton |
#6
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![]() Your "original point of departure" remains Paine - the way you log it makes no difference. Your "original point of departure" is whatever you want it to be. There are no rules as to which legs must correspond to which flight, nor even as to how long one can remain at an intermediate point and still have both legs be the same "flight". The FAQ even lists cases of remaining overnight on one flight, and using separate legs to reposition the flight "for the purpose of starting a cross country from X to Y". Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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