Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I better take over a thousand hours out of my log book and get the autopilot a logbook.
FlyChicaga said:Did she PFT?![]()
N49185 said:True or False? A private pilot takes his 10-year old daughter for a ride in the family airplane and allows the girl to fly the airplane during cruise flight. The private pilot may log the cruise portion of this flight as PIC.
A private pilot takes his 10-year old daughter for a ride in the family airplane and allows the girl to fly the airplane during cruise flight
I assume you're joking. If not, head over to your local EAA chapter and tell them they should be jailed for their "Young Eagles" program participation.7B2 said:She may not fly the plane at all, he is "just" a private pilot and not an instructor therefore he should be arrested, thrown in jail and his license taken away forever.
Only problem is that I only claim that the opinion came from a source that =I= think is reliable. Some day I may try to track it down a bit more.A Squared said:well I guess that interpretation settles it Mark. THinking about it, you posted that interpretation last time this topic came up...**CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED**, maybe this time I'll learn.
Actually in this case, I don't think that the rules are =construed= to say that. The language is used is really pretty clear and reflect an underlying FAA policy to permit one to count this kind of "hands-on flying time" toward the requirements for certificates or ratings. You are welcome to argue the counting is absurd. You'd be in good company.Personally, I think that it absurd that the regulations are construed to permit logging of PIC time when you are not actually the PIC, and when you are not even qualified to act as PIC. Many others also hold the view that this is absurd. However, that's how the regs are currently interpreted. Absurdity seems not to be a consideration.
Yes, she gets to fly a glorified winged weed eater in exchange for all the pretzels she can eat.FlyChicaga said:Did she PFT?
midlifeflyer said:The language is used is really pretty clear and reflect an underlying FAA policy to permit one to count this kind of "hands-on flying time" toward the requirements for certificates or ratings. You are welcome to argue the counting is absurd. You'd be in good company.
A Squared said:Do you know for a fact that it was originally the intent of the FAA to allow pilots to log PIC when they were not PIC? Or was FAA policy shaped by a regulation which was worded in a way which did not reflect their initial intent?
It's a chicken/egg thing, and I bet that in your career you have seen other examples of policy unintentionally shaped by interpretations of regulation or law.
Except for those that John Lynch quotes from once in a while in the Part 61 FAQ and the ones that get posted verbatim in online forums and newsgroups, there aren't any real repositories that I'm aware of on the Internet.skeezer said:On a side note, is there a website or some other place where all the past FAA chief counsel opinions can be found?