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Are the 135 minimums set in stone?

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FracCapt said:
Spoken like a true freight dog. Ya know what the 2 rules are for freight dogs?

1) Never go below minimums.

2) Never go missed approach.

Been there, done that....glad to be out of the all night flying. I was pretty dang excited about 18 months ago when my DAY flight time finally exceeded my NIGHT flight time for the first time in many years. :D
Rodger that! :) Bad thing about that tub o' bolts I fly is, you better be assured landing is in your future because with icing, you may not enjoy the missed.

I hear what you're saying on the night flying...fortunately for me, I'm on the ground by 8-8:30 PM.
 
Amen. I doubled my actual, night, and dang near everything else that can kill ya in about 2 months working freight. I love doing it, but am still not looking forward to winter in the midwest......
 
wingnutt said:
when first reading, this does appear to be a silly question, but there is a loophole that Freight Dog caught.

if you do not meet the IFR rules (by whatever margin) you could be brought in under the VFR rules until meeting the IFR mins. the only caveat to this is that you will be trained, and the checkride will be under IFR, but the 8410 will be noted "VFR ONLY until IFR minimums met" in the remarks section. then once you do meet the IFR mins, you are good to go, with no additional checkrides necessary...unless of course, it took you 6 months to reach mins.

or they could do like Airnet did and have you ride along until you meet the IFR mins.
this was exactly my experience... I was hired VFR only with 850 hours or so and assigned to a route that is severely VFR last May. By the end of summer, I had my 1200 and got checked out for IFR flying as well. This worked pretty well, but there were some times I thought my limitations might impact operations, so I am surprised that my employer offered it to me.
 

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