"Peter" wrote in message
news

Reading FAR/AIM 2004 it isn't entirely clear to me because different
sections refer to day and night cross country, and I don't think the
description of a day cross country applies to the night flight; the
distances are 150nm and 100nm respectively.
I have night flights with an instructor which exceed 100 miles in
total distance, and I have a solo night flight which exceeds 100nm
which was done between two airports whose direct line spacing is
119nm.
I suspect that the information on the basis of which I did the last
flight was bogus and I don't meet the FAA PPL requirement.
Can anyone suggest the FAR/AIM 2004 sections which could clarify this?
Look at 61.109 (Private Pilots, Aeronautical Experience). According to
61.109a2, you need "3 hours of night flight training in a single-engine
airplane that includes--(i) one cross-country flight of over 100 nautical
miles total distance". "Training" refers to dual flights, so your night solo
doesn't count. But any dual cross-country flight of 100nm total distance
does count. There is no straigh-line distance requirement.
--Gary
Peter.
--
Return address is invalid to help stop junk mail.
E-mail replies to but remove the X and the Y.
Please do NOT copy usenet posts to email - it is NOT necessary.