Not exactly, but it may as well be . . .
Bruin-Flyer said:
I was wondering if it was PFT if someone pays to sit right seat and log SIC time in a twin piston that only requires one crewmember?
The generally-accepted test of P-F-T is twofold:
(1) An employee must remit payment to the employer to defray the cost of his/her training as a condition of employment; and
(2) The training is specific and esoteric to that company only and does not lead to a certificate, rating or operating privilege which can be marketed elsewhere.
Your situation fails the first test because you are not being being employed by the twin's operator (are you?). It fails the second test because you are just sitting in the right seat and have received no training. Therefore, in the strict sense, it is not P-F-T.
Although you're not remitting payment for training, you are renting a seat in the airplane and you are not a required crewmember. Therefore, although you're learning quite a bit, and that can be beneficial, and it is not strictly P-F-T, the time you log very well may be questionable.
Conclusion. It is not P-F-T. The scheme really amounts to you paying to be a passenger in that airplane.
I, for one, would have learned a lot by riding. But, I wouldn't use it as a scheme to build multi hours. It very well could be a beneficial scheme for making a contact that could lead to a legitimate job and legitimate multi hours. I don't think it's worth paying for, though.
Hope that helps.