question on student taxi practice
On 04/06/06 11:09, T o d d P a t t i s t wrote:
Mark Hansen wrote:
Did your instructor give you a solo endorsement?
It's not required.
I'm not sure if the FAA recognizes ground-only operations as a separate
type of solo.
It's not solo, since he's not acting as PIC, solo or
otherwise. No license is required for taxiing without the
intent to commit aviation. It may not be covered by
insurance, however, which is probably why it's not commonly
done.
§ 61.3 Requirement for certificates, ratings, and
authorizations.
(a) Pilot certificate. A person may not act as pilot in
command or in any other capacity as a required pilot flight
crewmember of a civil aircraft of U.S. registry, unless that
person—
(1) Has a valid pilot certificate ....
§ 1.1 "Pilot in command" means the pilot responsible for
the operation and safety of an aircraft during flight time.
"Flight time" means the time from the moment the aircraft
first moves under its own power for the purpose of flight
until the moment it comes to rest at the next point of
landing. ("Block-to-block" time.)
Thanks, Todd. Those were exactly the pieces I was trying to think of.
--
Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane
Cal Aggie Flying Farmers
Sacramento, CA
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