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But nothing wrong or illegal has been done! The origional light still works, it's a miraclenosehair said:Many FAA Inspectors are really good guys and would not waste their time or your tax dollars on such meaningless enforcement...BUT...there is always the nutcase waiting in the wings for just such an opportunity to "straighten you out". Power to control. They have it, and it has made some of them crazy. That is all we are talking about: The FAA Inspector on the hunt. And he will win. He has the whole United States Government Legal Defense System on his side.
Sorry Jedi, but it appears as though there's some question as to whether or not something was done that wasn't quite kosher. My personal opinion (based on nearly 30 years of CFIing) is that, at the very least, he exercised questionable judgement. I'd hate to see him compound his error by making obvious attempts at covering up his error. The FAA is very adept at ferreting out these types of dodges.Jedi_Cheese said:But nothing wrong or illegal has been done!
If he did not actually give 8 hours of instruction, then he would not be lying!What more will you lie about in the future if you feel a need to lie about more than 8 hours of instruction.
It may take some interpretation, but if he honestly did not instruct the entire flight, then he can honestly log less than the 8.5 and not be lying about it. Otherwise, he's running towards the FSDO covered with gasoline and flicking a BIC lighter.Who cares about what the inspector will or will not do. The fact of the matter is that if you break the rules it does not matter wether you knew about it or not. Intentional or unintentional again you still messed up.
He is exactly correct. The problems start when the guy paying is not rated and/or does not own the aircraft.However, when you have a fellow who is a rated and legal pilot and he either owns his own airplane or rents one and then hires a pilot (could be CFI or just a commercial pilot) to fly with him, you are operating under what is considered part 91 "pilot for hire". Same concept and legal principle as a part 91 corporate flight department.