F16fixer said:
The way I log time is by having the ATP that I fly with sign my log book as dual given. Under part 61.167 I believe.
Lots of potential problens here ... first the biggest problem is for the ATP. I assume that he doesn't have an instructor's certificate, otherwise you wouldn't be citing the 61.167 ATP privileges. Anyway, that reg allows the holder of an ATP to instruct "in air transportation". So are you in "air transportation"? Probably not. The regulation was intended for airline captains to instruct co-pilots without an instructor's certificate, although it desn't specifically say that. So what is "air transportation"?
Part 1 says:
Air transportation means interstate, overseas, or foreign air transportation or the transportation of mail by aircraft.
OK assuming, that you aren't flying mail, to foreign countries or overseas, the only possible way this could qualify is if you are flying to other states ... but "interstate air transportation is further defined in Part 1 as:
Interstate air transportation means the carriage by aircraft of persons or property as a common carrier for compensation or hire, or the carriage of mail by aircraft in commerce:
(1) Between a place in a State or the District of Columbia and another place in another State or the District of Columbia;
(2) Between places in the same State through the airspace over any place outside that State; or
(3) Between places in the same possession of the United States; Whether that commerce moves wholly by aircraft of partly by aircraft and partly by other forms of transportation.
Notice it says: "as a common carrier" That means a part 121, 135 or 129 carrier, which I don't think your operation qualifies.
Definitions of "air transportation" aside, the FAA has started enforcement proceedings against ATP's who have signed endorsements. here's one:
http://www.ntsb.gov/O_n_O/docs/AVIATION/4817.PDF
You'll notice that the ATP beat the charges, but it was only after an long expensive legal process (by the time your case is being heard by the full board of the NTSB, you've already travelled down a long tough, expensive road.) and in this case, the decision was partly based on the fact that the ATP had been advised by a Designated Examiner that it was legal to do. Notice that the whole process started with the FAA doing an emergency revocation of the ATP's certificate. Does your ATP feel like rolling the dice with his certificate on the line?
Now, aside from the question of whether an ATP can give instruction, let's take a look at the concept of logging dual: In order to log instruction received, you have to receive instruction. Is the captain actually instructing you? Or, are you flying the airplane, and you are logging it as instruction, even though instruction isn't being given?
If you're logging instruction when instructin is not being given, isn't that falsification?
If you really are getting instruction, that raises the question of *why* you are getting instruction. You say that you have 35 hours logged. I think that it's safe to say that a large portion of this time is enroute, on or off the airways, so why do you have 25-30 hours of instruction logged on flying in a straight line? Are you really so inept that you need constant instruction to stay on an airway?
Either way, large quantities of of dual logged looks bad.
On a different issue, you may have not noticed that raysalmon is referring to a King Air 350. I understand that you're flying a 200. I'm not a king air expert, but I've never heard of a configuration of a 200 which would make it a 2 pilot aircraft.