barnyard
F Caravans
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2003
- Posts
- 328
Careful what you log
hey dude-
Keep your long term goals in mind. If your ambition is to go to a regional, 'retire' as a captain while continuing to do your real estate thing on the side, the paying for SIC thing might work. However if you're trying to get in the corporate world and show up to an interview with a bunch of single pilot ac SIC time, you have a much grater chance of getting laughed out of the interview in the first 10 minutes.
Where I work there is an SIC program where guys buy right seat time in the single pilot airplanes. Now while the FAA says you can legally log the time SIC, it just looks funny to someone who has been in the business decades. Some guys say they will log PIC time under the 'sole manipulator' rule. While this is legal to do, anyone with any aviation experience knows it's bogus that a 135 would give a 600 hour guy a twin turbine to go fly around as the captain. So your faced with the dilemma that you can actually log the time PIC, while not being the captain of the airplane. Yes you can log the time, but upon logbook inspection at your next interview, the person across the desk mat be looking for PIC time, not 'sole manipulator' time. They may even see it as you falsifying your experience trying to cut in line. Slippery slope.
There is almost no fast track to break into the corporate world (except for knowing mgmt at a company with a flight dept) but if your goal is a regional this may be a good option. My advice is to never put anything in your logbook that could be construed into you lying about your experience. Hope this helps, and good luck!
hey dude-
Keep your long term goals in mind. If your ambition is to go to a regional, 'retire' as a captain while continuing to do your real estate thing on the side, the paying for SIC thing might work. However if you're trying to get in the corporate world and show up to an interview with a bunch of single pilot ac SIC time, you have a much grater chance of getting laughed out of the interview in the first 10 minutes.
Where I work there is an SIC program where guys buy right seat time in the single pilot airplanes. Now while the FAA says you can legally log the time SIC, it just looks funny to someone who has been in the business decades. Some guys say they will log PIC time under the 'sole manipulator' rule. While this is legal to do, anyone with any aviation experience knows it's bogus that a 135 would give a 600 hour guy a twin turbine to go fly around as the captain. So your faced with the dilemma that you can actually log the time PIC, while not being the captain of the airplane. Yes you can log the time, but upon logbook inspection at your next interview, the person across the desk mat be looking for PIC time, not 'sole manipulator' time. They may even see it as you falsifying your experience trying to cut in line. Slippery slope.
There is almost no fast track to break into the corporate world (except for knowing mgmt at a company with a flight dept) but if your goal is a regional this may be a good option. My advice is to never put anything in your logbook that could be construed into you lying about your experience. Hope this helps, and good luck!