RJFlyer - the way you’ve been logging time is correct.
StormChaser beat me to the post – his quotes come from the most recent version of the FAA’s FAQs for Part 61, and while it differs from
Jim’s, it is a more valid answer.
First of all, you’re not “REQUIRED” to log anything – to paraphrase §61.51(a), you’re only required to document and record time to demonstrate that you meet the requirements for a certificate/rating and/or recency of flight. Anything else you log is entirely up to you. I know several senior pilots who do not actually log any flights at all, relying on company records to demonstrate their currency; I’ve flown with one who flies and logs exactly one landing per month (great for the FO!), and another who only logs his three in one day every other month; one CA hadn’t logged a flight in 3½ years, though they all had their monthly company printouts. Whether you log a flight is entirely up to you, though as a regional SIC you probably want to get all the time into your logbook that you possibly can.
That said, what goes into your logbook must be accurate. There are people that will tell you that your logbook is your own record and you can do what you want with it – but in actuality it is a legal record of your flight time that you will present to the FAA for check rides, to the airlines for job interviews, and (hopefully never) the NTSB if you make a mistake, so what goes into it must be correct to the best of your knowledge – you can’t have your own personal definition of night time or IMC or PIC.
I use the same source for Legal Interpretations that
Doc (and I think also
TIS) uses. Unfortunately, the company that supplies that information is no longer in business as of the spring, so the legal opinions that we all refer to may no longer be current. In any case, the most recent of these opinions was from 1997, before the most recent Parts 61/141 rewrite, and may not be relevant for that reason anyway.
On the other hand, the FAA FAQs are recent – the Regulatory Support Branch people that write the rules update them every few weeks. While they also have a disclaimer that the Office of Chief Counsel does not review all their answers, most of the newer ones are in fact reviewed and many have been revised because of this process; some even include the supporting legal opinions. This is in contrast to the last published Legal Interpretations, which are now four years old.
Anyway, here’s my answer – like you and
StormChaser, I log my night time as a condition of flight whenever I am SIC, but I only log instrument time when I am sole manipulator – you cannot log instrument time otherwise. As an aside, on my computerized log, I do track SIC instrument separately because some airlines used to consider it – Continental, for example.
Here’s my train of thought, and also why
Doc is wrong:
§61.51 is the relevant FAR for the logging of flight time; §61.51(a) requires you to log flight time to show that you meet the requirements for certificates and/or recency; there shouldn’t be any problems with that.
§61.51(b) tells you what you must include in logging a flight; paragraph §61.51(b)(3) is important:
(3) Conditions of flight –
(i) Day or night.
(ii) Actual instrument.
(iii) Simulated instrument conditions…
Note that “Actual instrument” is a condition of flight and ought to be logged, as is “night”. So far, so good.
Now skip (c), (d), (e) and (f) – there shouldn’t be any problems there – and get to §61.51(g), and specifically §61.51(g)(1):
(g) Logging instrument flight time.
(1) A person may log instrument time only for that flight time when the person operates the aircraft solely by reference to instruments under actual or simulated instrument flight conditions.
(Paragraphs (2), (3) and (4) aren’t relevant to this discussion)
This is where we get hung up – while “actual instrument” is a condition of flight from §61.51(c)(3), §61.51(g)(1) gives a specific requirement for when this particular condition of flight actually applies.
So, is the SIC operating the aircraft if he’s not flying it? Because if he is, and the aircraft is in IMC, then the SIC should be able to log that.
Doc thinks the SIC is operating the aircraft, and it turns out he’s right – sort of. To save space, I won’t reprint the FAA legal opinion (it’s linked on his site), but the FAA says that in effect, if an aircraft is complex enough to require an SIC, then by definition on some level the SIC must be operating the aircraft as well as the PIC, even if he’s not actually the pilot manipulating the controls – the same applies to the F/E. So at this point DOC has his answer – the SIC is operating the aircraft - and so if the aircraft is in IMC, then the SIC can log instrument time whether or not he’s the flying pilot.
Unfortunately, that’s as far as
Doc has gone. The FAA has gone further, however. They have answered this specific question, as cited by
StormChaser – as far as §61.51(g)(1) goes, “operates the aircraft” means more than just being a required crewmember – as far as the FAA is concerned, it means a pilot must actually be the flying pilot
So which is the right answer?
StormChaser's - no question. We appear to have two FAA opinions that disagree with each other, but really we don’t.
StormChaser cites a specific FAA answer to exactly the question asked;
Doc does not. That’s the answer, and I don’t see any room for creative interpretation.
The problem with
Doc’s legal citation is that it’s not the relevant to this question. He has taken a valid FAA answer to an entirely different question and tried to apply out it of context it to this one; sometimes that works, but this time it doesn’t. The opinion that
Doc cited had to do with the liability of a ground marshaller in a ground collision; in that opinion the FAA later stated that historically the SIC “…is deemed to be operating the aircraft, whether or not the SIC is actually manipulating the controls.”
Good enough, but it’s an “apples and oranges” thing – in the legal opinion
Doc cites, the FAA is using the term “operates” in a very general sense discussing liability and who gets violated; while in the FAQs cited by
StormChaser, the FAA uses “operates” in a very specific sense as it relates only to logging instrument flight time (§61.51(g)(1)) and recency of flight experience (§61.57(c)(1)). In their answers, the FAA consistently applies phrases like “hands-on”, “flying pilot,” and, “hands-on-the-controls,” when discussing instrument flying – their intent is clear. On his site,
Doc says he asked the FAA for an interpretation, and the answer may change, but for now it looks like the FAA’s point-of-view on this issue is set. Given a choice between
Doc's interpretation and the FAA’s explicit answer, I’m going with the Feds.
StormChaser is right.
They’re already linked on this site, but here are the links to DOC’s Forum and the FAA FAQs again:
FAA Part 61 FAQ
Doc's FAR Forum
Hope this helps. Now I have to go fix my logbook…