High Performance v. Complex
. . . . or, a rose, by any other name . . . . .
Your CFI is misinformed. Your 172RG checkout can and should count as your "complex" endorsement but not for "high-performance."
I, too, was misinformed until I came on the board a year and a half ago after eight years out of aviation. Apparently several years ago the FAA made this extremely stupid distinction between high-performance and complex. Twenty years ago, I got my high-performance endorsement in a PA-28R-200, which is an Arrow with the 200-hp Lycoming. There was no such thing as a "complex" airplane. In those days, people called such airplanes "complex," but that was not an official FAA term. In those days, you could have checked out in a 450-hp radial Stearman and it would have counted for retractable gear, flaps, and controllable propeller as well as high-performance.
I started reading here about "complex" and learned that the FAA had established "complex" as a term and distinguished between it and "high performance," and that flying a TWIN ENGINED Seminole (which most are) was now invalid for a high-performance endorsement! I say again, twin-engined. The kind of PIC time and large quantities of which will win you regional airline consideration but not a high-performance endorsement. Does that mean that if one is hired at the regionals with Seminole being one's only retractable time that one must beg the regional check airman for a high-performance endorsement before being legal to fly a 1900? Sarcasm is deliberate. I have former colleagues whom the commuters hired with only 172 and Seminole time, so what I'm saying isn't as far-fetched or rad as it sounds. Hello?!?
It is all so stupid. Not to count a twin checkout as high-performance. But, the FAA didn't seek our input, so the long and short of it is your checkout in a 172RG can be written up as your "complex" endorsement. Not like the old days, it cannot be written up as a high-performance endorsement.
Perhaps this should be added to JetPilot500's FAR-changing discussion.