ToiletDuck
Ninja
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2005
- Posts
- 598
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ToiletDuck said:FAR 61.3(e)
Instrument rating: No person may act as pilot in command of a civil aircraft under IFR or in weather conditions less than the minimums prescribed for VFR flight unless that person holds:
(1) The appropriate aircraft category, class, type (if required), and instrument rating on that person's pilot certificate for any airplane, helicopter, or powered-lift being flown.
Anyway the questions was based on if logging dual PIC is a bad practice for the logbooks. Next time read the topic before you jump in. Keep you from trying to Hijack a thread.
Thanks
Duck
ToiletDuck said:FAR 61.3(e)
Instrument rating: No person may act as pilot in command of a civil aircraft under IFR or in weather conditions less than the minimums prescribed for VFR flight unless that person holds:
(1) The appropriate aircraft category, class, type (if required), and instrument ratting on that person's pilot certificate for any airplane, helicopter, or powered-lift being flown.
Anyway the questions was based on if logging dual PIC is a bad practice for the logbooks. Next time read the topic before you jump in. Keep you from trying to Hijack a thread.
Thanks
Duck
ToiletDuck said:hmmm ok so it would be best that I split it PIC and PIC when recieveing instruction.
That's correct. I just want to add that when applying for a job be sure to break down the flying the way the company wants it. Sometimes the forms they use apply to airline flying and not the flying we did early on in our training. If the company doesn't allow for dual/PIC (UAL used to be that way) then just fill out the form the way they want. For example....most 121 carriers could care less about how much time you have in a Piper vs a Cessna even though some application forms asks for time in type. It's all SEL or piston twin to them. If, for some reason, they care then it's a good idea to have the numbers ready so you don't have to spend hours figuring it out.Dangerkitty said:Dude, why are you making this so hard on yourself? You will log PIC and Dual received at the same time.
It is 100% legal.
ToiletDuck said:Well by looking at the FAR's and Talking to several other instructors I'm going to stick with you can't log it PIC if you don't have your instrument and are in IFR conditions.
Tram said:Well, if you don't have an instrument ticket, no you can't log actual instrument flying - as your not rated for it..
Thus a non-instrument rated pilot taking instrument flight instruction, if rated in the aircraft, may log PIC based on the "sole manipulator of the controls" rule. Since there is nothing in the rules that addresses meteorological conditions, the pilot may log PIC while in the clouds. This is supported by FAA chief counsel opinions [Federal Regulations Explained-Jeppesen].