Wow. This subject appears to evoke some emotional responses from the rank and file out there! Amazing. Claims of three pilots logging PIC as being "sleazy", compared to the behavior of psychics, and somehow jeopardizing the "integrity" of your logbook. The notation of how many random opinions presented here that were in favor vs. against was particularly irrelevant. I will not bother to quote all of these remarks because they are emotionally biased, though probably with noble intentions. I commend the general honest nature with which most of you seem to approach logging your time. However, I would gladly put my logbook up against yours anyday WRT "integrity".
Look folks, this ain't rocket science, there are five ways to log PIC, and five ways only (which have nothing to do with acting as PIC):
1) Sole manipulator
2) Sole occupant
3) As required crewmember - "Safety pilot" (part 101 def I think)
4) As CFI
5) As ATP in an operation requiring the use of the ATP certificate.
It is clear then that this practice is not only legal, but valuable given the scenario another poster mentioned regarding a pilot under-the-hood, a potential CFII candidate and a CFII in the back. Which, to the poster who said I had a logbook "full" of this time (I said 50 hours, which is out of 3500+ - yeah, that poster's remark isn't emotional or anything) is exactly the purpose of each and every minute of those 50 hours in my logbook. "Full" Yeah, right. Please try to separate yourself from emotion for just a moment here folks...
If you chose to call this practice "questionable", "sleazy", or lacking "integrity", that is your choice. However, you will have made a judgement based on emotion rather than fact. It does not degrade the integrity of any logbook nor does it represent a "scheme" such that an interviewer, the FAA or some insurance person should feel the need to dig deeper. Knowing the facts and applying them correctly will always win when the dust settles. It is knowledge and skill that defeats emotion, everytime.
I hope this helps. Please understand all of you that have bashed my comments that this was and is my intention all along, to help.
To start another argument just for funzzies:
1) I takeoff and then land at another airport 5 miles away. Can I log this as cross country?
2) I get in, start up, taxi out and I have a problem during the runup let's say. I taxi back in and shutdown. Can I log the time?
I'd be interested to hear all of you critic's answers. Know UP FRONT that my answers are per the regs, not based on emotion. Let's see if yours are.
Take care!
Look folks, this ain't rocket science, there are five ways to log PIC, and five ways only (which have nothing to do with acting as PIC):
1) Sole manipulator
2) Sole occupant
3) As required crewmember - "Safety pilot" (part 101 def I think)
4) As CFI
5) As ATP in an operation requiring the use of the ATP certificate.
It is clear then that this practice is not only legal, but valuable given the scenario another poster mentioned regarding a pilot under-the-hood, a potential CFII candidate and a CFII in the back. Which, to the poster who said I had a logbook "full" of this time (I said 50 hours, which is out of 3500+ - yeah, that poster's remark isn't emotional or anything) is exactly the purpose of each and every minute of those 50 hours in my logbook. "Full" Yeah, right. Please try to separate yourself from emotion for just a moment here folks...
If you chose to call this practice "questionable", "sleazy", or lacking "integrity", that is your choice. However, you will have made a judgement based on emotion rather than fact. It does not degrade the integrity of any logbook nor does it represent a "scheme" such that an interviewer, the FAA or some insurance person should feel the need to dig deeper. Knowing the facts and applying them correctly will always win when the dust settles. It is knowledge and skill that defeats emotion, everytime.
I hope this helps. Please understand all of you that have bashed my comments that this was and is my intention all along, to help.
To start another argument just for funzzies:
1) I takeoff and then land at another airport 5 miles away. Can I log this as cross country?
2) I get in, start up, taxi out and I have a problem during the runup let's say. I taxi back in and shutdown. Can I log the time?
I'd be interested to hear all of you critic's answers. Know UP FRONT that my answers are per the regs, not based on emotion. Let's see if yours are.
Take care!