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That's for sho!TonyC said:(PFT hours do not count at all.)
Dam! I guess I better go back and edit my heavy time...so much for having 5000 PIC in the 777...I was MULTIPLYING the flight time by the number of seats!TonyC said:Time as a passenger in a commercial airliner is credited based on a ratio of 1:number of seats on the airliner.
All flight time counts toward total time. Dual hours count toward total time. At this stage of your training, your instructor should be writing in your logbook dual received, single-engine and total time.UnAnswerd said:As an example, you have to have something like 1200 hours TT to fly 135. Can total time be every little minuscule event (like your familiarization flight), or is it strictly PIC time???
Awww, cummon, donutman, this is a serious question. Tell the truth, you had to get some help figuring your total time, too.mmmdonut said:You guys are still replying to this joker? Wow!
You weren't around to pick on because of your political beliefs....but, you're here now...so it's time us to abandon this thread to pick on you as soon as you start your next thread about those evil Republicans and how they screwed over half(you use that new math, don't you?) of the country out of getting the president they really wanted...mmmdonut said:You guys are still replying to this joker? Wow!
Just to open a can of worms (and to annoy mmmdonut by making this thread go on for pages):bobbysamd said:At this stage of your training, your instructor should be writing in your logbook dual received, single-engine and total time.
shamrock said:So after you get your private, how do you log Dual Rec'd? Is it only Dual Rec'd and TT or is it Dual Rec'd, TT and PIC? Way back when, I had several instructors tell me that Dual Rec'd + PIC should equal TT and that's the way at least one Major (United, if memory serves) wanted it.
You can log PIC any time you're the sole occupant of, sole manipulator of the controls in, or required crewmember necessary for the safe operation of an aircraft which you are rated and current in.shamrock said:Just to open a can of worms (and to annoy mmmdonut by making this thread go on for pages):
So after you get your private, how do you log Dual Rec'd? Is it only Dual Rec'd and TT or is it Dual Rec'd, TT and PIC? Way back when, I had several instructors tell me that Dual Rec'd + PIC should equal TT and that's the way at least one Major (United, if memory serves) wanted it.
Feel free to throw in your $.02 as well as any and all FAR references and FAA rulings you may come across, if only to allow Mr. Donut a break from his antics on the non-aviation board.
Vik said:This is very easy ...
There is column in your log that is "total duration of flight" .. sum that up, its your TT.
I think you should have logged 4.6 Total TimeSol Rosenberg said:For example, a 1.3 hour training flight would be:
PIC 1.3
Dual Rec.1.3
Day 1.3
Hood .7 (or whatever it was)
_________
Total Time 1.3
well of course...how do you think I got all my flight time??TonyC said:I think you should have logged 4.6 Total Time
(1.3 + 1.+3 +1.3 + 0.7 = 4.6)
If you had thought to include a column for C172, you could have logged an additional 1.3 for a total of 5.9
so THATS where I've been going wrong...TonyC said:Oh, yeah. 1.3 for ASEL, Total Time goes to 7.2 !
It's not too late - - you can always make changes to your logbook as long as you make the changes in red ink.minitour said:so THATS where I've been going wrong...
-mini
ARGHTonyC said:It's not too late - - you can always make changes to your logbook as long as you make the changes in red ink.
Maybe that's how United wants it, but that doesn't make it correct. After you are rated in the aircraft category and class in question, you can log dual received and PIC because you are sole manipulator of the controls. Thus, you would log it as PIC, dual received, total time, single or multi, as applicable, as well as night, hood, actual instrument, etc., as applicable.shamrock said:So after you get your private, how do you log Dual Rec'd? Is it only Dual Rec'd and TT or is it Dual Rec'd, TT and PIC? Way back when, I had several instructors tell me that Dual Rec'd + PIC should equal TT and that's the way at least one Major (United, if memory serves) wanted it.
* Gasp *bobbysamd said:...contrary to popular belief, Microsoft Flight Simulator time is not aircraft time...
Wait a minute!. If the airliner is only half full, can the ratio be by the number of passengers instead of number of seats?TonyC said:Time as a passenger in a commercial airliner is credited based on a ratio of 1:number of seats on the airliner. (If you are a member of the airline's frequent flyer program, you can contact their flight time representative and receive bonus hour credits on qualifying flights.)
The regs are not foggy at all. 14 CFR 61.57(c) governs instrument currency. This FAR states clearly that you have to execute the approach yourself for it to count for currency purposes:Ball Turret said:If you are instructing an instrument student in actual, can you log the approach even if you do not touch the controls but you are directing him/her the whole time. I have heard different about this one too and it is very foggy in the regs.
This is also the only time in your aviation carrer that a gear up landing is preferred...minitour said:This changes of course if its a sea plane