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User997 said:So if you log all that flight time as dual, are you required to have the "dual giving" pilot sign each entry in your logbook?
How also does this apply to a "dual giving" ATP rated pilot, that doesn't have an MEI license? I always understood that ATP had the right to give dual instruction in an airplane with the instructor ratings, having been covered by the ATP.
Anyone?
aroundtheblock said:Also, I remember hearing the instructor at Simuflight while I was getting my 350 type something about baggage compartment. If I remember correctly, if the airplane is equipped with baggage compartment seats then that makes it a 2 pilot airplane. He went on to state that even if the seats are not in the plane, but that the plane came from the factory so equipped then it was a 2 pilot airplane. Anyone else heard this 1?
aroundtheblock said:Also, I remember hearing the instructor at Simuflight while I was getting my 350 type something about baggage compartment. If I remember correctly, if the airplane is equipped with baggage compartment seats then that makes it a 2 pilot airplane. He went on to state that even if the seats are not in the plane, but that the plane came from the factory so equipped then it was a 2 pilot airplane. Anyone else heard this 1?
F16fixer said:What is a common carrier? I'm looking under 1.1 of the FAR's under the definition of Interstate air transportation
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.
Air transportation means interstate, overseas, or foreign air transportation or the transportation of mail by aircraft.
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.
aroundtheblock said:As for aiding a young up and coming pilot log turbine time, I see no fault in signing his logbook, as a current MEI and typed 350 driver. Otherwise he could not prove his time and committment to learning his chosen craft, regardless if it is 5 or 35 hours. Any low time pilot sitting in any King Air will be learning something new for awhile. Heck, I have over 11,000 hours and 4 types now and having flown for the airlines for 8 years before being furloughed I now fly a BE-300. I'm still learning something new every day.
aroundtheblock said:If I was hiring a new pilot, which I do from time to time, and 2 guys were equal but 1 guy had logged 100 hours dual in a 350 legally (emphasis added) and 1 guy said I could have but I knew I couldn't log it so I didn't, which guy should I hire?