pgcfii2002
"Uh....oh yeah...&quo
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2003
- Posts
- 1,313
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I'm not aware of a carrier that would let you count safety pilot time.
It =is= clear. Been clear for a lot of years. Wasn't changed when they revised Part 61 10 years ago and there's nothing that changes it in the current proposed revision.When they rewrite part 61 I hope they change PIC under it to something more clear.
Nothin' to it, Sonny ! Just get your CFI.I wanna be a safety pilot when I grow up!
....Bestest job in the whole world Mommy!
It =is= clear. Been clear for a lot of years.
there's nothing that changes it in the current proposed revision.
You just don't like it.
No it isn't because if it was the #1 topic on these and other forums wouldn't be can I log PIC as a regional F/O, can I log PIC as a safety pilot, or can I log PIC as sole manipulator; my buddy logs PIC as a safety pilot; the 2 instructors in the back seat each log PIC for giving us each dual; and because it was a moonless night we all logged it as actual.
This weekend take a poll at your airport ask some random questions on what is legal and isn't legal to log. Then get back to me on whether the regulations are clearly written or not, being able to understand something (which most people don't anyways) does not make it clear.
We should not have two distinctly different definitions for PIC which we currently do in the FAR's.
There should be a clear definition of when you can log actual IFR, when you can log PIC, etc.
Because while I can read the legal opinions (and the fact several people have had to write for rulings further indicates the lack of clarity) and I have a good grasp of what is and what isn't allowable it took a lot of time and effort to get there that could have been expended better doing something else.
"I don't understand" or "I don't have the knowledge" is not the definition of unclear. All of those questions you just mentioned, from an FAR standpoint, have had unvarying official answers for decades.No it isn't because if it was the #1 topic on these and other forums wouldn't be can I log PIC as a regional F/O, can I log PIC as a safety pilot, or can I log PIC as sole manipulator; my buddy logs PIC as a safety pilot; the 2 instructors in the back seat each log PIC for giving us each dual; and because it was a moonless night we all logged it as actual.
Heck, take a poll of pilots walking up to a Cutlass to explain the workings of the constant speed prop or the landing gear and you might find that those systems are "unclear" by the definition of some folks here.Take a poll at the local airport? Question lazy pilots about their understanding of the regulation they haven't taken the time to learn, and thus make a truly scientific determination as to how well the regulation is written, or any degree of ambiguity therein? Why not just flip a coin? The test will be just as intelligent. Truth is that when pilots profess to ignorance of the regulation, they're professing to ignorance. You can stop right there, because that's the heart of the problem. Not the regulation.
"I don't understand" is not the definition of unclear.
Heck, take a poll of pilots walking up to a Cutlass to explain the workings of the constant speed prop or the landing gear and you might find that those systems are "unclear" by the definition of some folks here.
I'll have to disagree with you. A lot of folks will not be able to read that book and understand the workings of that Cutlass. I still haven't a clue how to read a wiring diagram without getting a headache. Ever see a student pilot try to use those performance charts or an E6B without instruction? Or figure out that "maneuvering speed" is not the speed at which it's easy to maneuver or that "controllability" does not mean how easy it is to keep the aircraft under control?Take a copy of part 61 and ask what is the maximum amount of people who can log PIC on a flight. I suspect that the vast majority would not be able to provide the correct answer.
All of those questions you just mentioned, from an FAR standpoint, have had unvarying official answers for decades.
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A sport, recreational, private, or commercial pilot may log pilot-in-command time only for that flight time during which that person is the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the pilot is rated or has privileges
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The misunderstanding of this pretty simple sentence seem to be a bunch of "buts," "unlesses," "excepts" and other concepts that people keep reading into it, not the language of the regulation itself. I guess "clarity" is in the eye of the beholder.