paulsalem said:
I would like to do it as the book says, and hence agree with your last post. If I was the sole minipulator of the controls then I am legal to log PIC. But I've herad that companies do not like to see that. Or they will drill me with systems qustions on the aircraft.
Like I said, I think this is a "presentation" problem rather than a "record keeping" problem. Are you making that flight sound like it was "quality" time or "meet FAA requirements" time?
(BTW, keep in mind the reverse of the problem - not all Part 1 PIC time is loggable as PIC under 61.51. So if =all= you did was to log Part 1 PIC in the PIC column, you might have a falsified logbook).
Take this with a grain of salt, but despite the horror stories you sometime hear, I have a little problem with the concept that you will get in trouble with a company by doing what the law very specifically permits you to do. Your logbook is kept because FAR 61.51 starts off by saying
==============================
Training time and aeronautical experience. Each person must document and record the following time in a manner acceptable to the Administrator:
==============================
Note: "acceptable to the
Administrator," not "acceptable to Delta." Your logbook is a record that you are required to keep in order to meet federal government requirements. But the information that you hand over to an employer to show how qualified you are is always fair game. The issue is keeping them separate.
I know from reading a lot of messages on this subject that employers generally want to see Part 1 PIC. That makes sense. Understandably, they could care less about the cross country flight you took with your uncle in his Malibu and lawfully logged as cross country PIC time toward your instrument rating. And if you tell them that "I have command time in a Malibu" you will get nailed, and rightfully so. But I can't imagine a company saying that you should not have counted the time toward your instrument rating.
I agree with Timebuilder's suggestion of a separate column for it. I undersatnd a lot of pilots do that. When at the interview, you point out that the "regular" PIC column reflects time that qualifies for meeting various FAA requirements, but that the "Part 1 PIC" column reflects your command experience. I'm sure there are ways applicants have even put his information on their resumes so that it is clear which is which.