I work for a part 121 carrier as a first officer on the A320 and B737 . I have a type rating in both aircraft. While I am the sole manipulator of the controls can I log PIC time.
We were just having this conversation in the crewroom the other day. The general concensus we all came up with was that in 121 ops, you can only log PIC time if you are the one that signs the release. Only the captain can log the PIC time. I'm sure that you could find a FSDO that would have a different opinion though. If you ever plan on applying to a different airline though, the interviewers would probably have plenty of questions about it. I would stick to logging SIC.
>>>>>>As far as FAR 121 goes, I would say that unless you are assigned by the company as the PIC of the flight you should log the time as SIC only.
Where exactly does it say this in Part 121?
As far as I know there's nothing in Part 121, nor should there be. Part 121 addresses airline operations, not personal record keeping. Personal record keeping is addressed in Part 61, specifically 61.51. According to 61.51, yes, you may log PIC in an aircraft for which you are rated when you are the sole manipulator of hte controls.
I think the real question is *should* you. I guess that would depend on what your reasons are for logging the time. The FAA accepts PIC time logged in this manner for pilot qualifications and certification requirements, but with 7500 hours, and ATP and 4 type ratings, it think it is sfae to assume that terrell has logged enough PIC for any FAA requirement I can think of. So, the only other reason to log PIC is for qualifications for employment. In that regard, it is my understanding the most major airlines will only accept PIC time which meets the part 1 definition.
I think that most airlines will only want to see PIC time in which you were actually the pilot in command.
Sorry to spoil all your fun, but just because you are type-rated in an aircraft does not make you PIC in that aircraft simply by virtue of the fact that you are sole manipulator. Under FAR 121 there is only one PIC. Period. If you are not assigned to be PIC on that flight, then you are not the PIC. You can't simply say, "Well, it was my leg, and I played with the A/P, and I am typed, therefore I am PIC."
All technicalities aside, it is also simply dishonest. The FAR's (and most FOM's) put an incredible amount of responsibility on the PIC. The PIC is basically responsible for everyone's actions, including the F/A to a certain extent. The logbook, mechanical history, MEL compliance, FOM compliance, FAR compliance, ATC compliance -- all this responsibility rests with the PIC (Captain.)
For someone to sit in the right seat and surruptitiously log that unbeknownst to the genuine Captain is ... sort of like larceny. Think of it as theft of recogniztion without resonsibility.
Two questions must be asked:
1) Who signed the logbook and release under "PIC."
2) If someone screws up, who are they going to hang?
The original question was, "While I am the sole manipulator of the controls can I log PIC time."
61.51 says he can: (e) Logging pilot-in-command flight time. (1) A recreational, private, or commercial pilot may log pilot-in-command time only for that flight time during which that person-- (i) Is the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the pilot is rated;
I wouldn't say it's dishonest, but I'd be prepared to support an answer if asked whether it's logged IAW 61.51 or 1.
Thanks everyone for your inputs. The question I was trying to anwser is in regards to a FAA Air Carrier Operations Inspector application concerning the statement;
I have had Pilot-in-Command experience in large aircraft(over 12,500 pounds gross takeoff weight) in the last three years.
You only quoted a portion of 61.51(e). The part you left out is the part that applies in this case. Your quote mentioned a "recreational, private or commercial pilot", which does not apply.
In order to act as PIC under FAR 121 in a B-737 or A-320, which is what terrell was inquiring about, you need an ATP. Part 61.51(e)(2) states that an Airline Transport Pilot may log as pilot in command all of the flight time while acting as pilot in command of an operations requiring an airline transport certificate.
No mention of "sole manipulator". Under FAR 121 there is a designated PIC. He is listed on the flight release. He signs the flight release. He is the PIC.
So, terrell...unless you have pilot in command experience as defined above, then you must answer the question with a "no".
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