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![]() Does the concept of "P1S" (Pilot in command under supervision) not exist in the US? When operating thus, the client would be PIC under supervision, but the captain would be the instructor/examiner. In europe, for example, when you take your PPL flight test, it is taken as P1S. If you pass, it counts as PIC time, and if you do not pass, it is simply P/UT (Pilot Under Tuition) time. Leland On Mon, 08 Sep 2003 11:21:54 GMT, "john price" wrote: My take has always been no... Unfortunately, the FAA doesn't seem to understand that once the wheels leave the ground, a tailwheel plane is just an airplane!!!! Ran into this a few years back on a trip to Sun & Fun in a friends Maule before I got my TW endorsement... Already had my IFR rating, but the owner didn't... John Price CFII/AGI/IGI http://home.att.net/~jm.price "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote in message .. . On 6 Sep 2003 17:55:47 -0700, (Doug) wrote: Client is an instrument rated pilot with his own tailwheel, instrument equipped airplane. Client is current on tailwheel, but lacks currency in IFR. Instructor is CFII and current, but lacks a tailwheel endorsement. Client wants to take off in VFR, and open an IFR flight plan (on the instructors qualifications), and fly the IFR flight plan. Can the instructor file an IFR flight plan and open it in the air (after takeoff) fly the IFR flight plan and cancel IFR before landing with the agreement that the client is PIC for takeoff and landing? It seems to me that the question is "is it necessary to be acting as PIC in order to open and accept an IFR clearance?" because the CFII cannot act as PIC in a tailwheel aircraft, yet he does have "catagory and class" ratings necessary to accept an IFR clearance. But I will have to admit, I really don't know. I'll stick my head out and say NO ... because: Someone has to be PIC. In instrument conditions, the PIC must have an instrument rating. To be PIC in a tailwheel a/c, one must have a tailwheel endorsement. Neither pilot in the above scenario meets the requirements. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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![]() "Leland Vandervort" wrote in message ... Does the concept of "P1S" (Pilot in command under supervision) not exist in the US? When operating thus, the client would be PIC under supervision, but the captain would be the instructor/examiner. Not as described above. You can be PIC while receiving instruction, but you have to meet the requirements for PIC. If you don't, then the instructor must be PIC and meet the requirements for that. An odd quirk is that you can log PIC while the instructor is PIC, but that's not material here. In europe, for example, when you take your PPL flight test, it is taken as P1S. If you pass, it counts as PIC time, and if you do not pass, it is simply P/UT (Pilot Under Tuition) time. In the US there is special dispensation given to student pilots to allow them to be PIC on their flight tests. Actually, there is no strict requirement that the examinee be PIC on flight tests either. |
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The answer here is a resounding no.
From 14CFR61.31(i) ... no person may act as pilot in command of a tailwheel airplane unless that person has ... received an endorsement in the person's logbook from an authorized instructor who found the person proficient in the operation of a tailwheel airplane. Note that this is not limited to takeoff and landing. Therefore, the CFII who lacks a tailwheel endorsement may not serve as PIC in a tailwheel airplane at all. The student, who lacks an instrument rating, may not serve as PIC under IFR. As a practical matter, this would work fine until the day the weather was really bad. When ceilings are low (say less than 500 ft) and visibilities are bad (less than 2 miles) it often becomes necessary or highly desirable to land with a quartering tailwind, on wet pavement, with insufficient visibility for precise aircraft control without reference to instruments, or all the above. In such conditions, one really needs instrument experience AND tailwheel experience to successfully make the transition from instrument flight to visual flight and a safe landing. The process is not inherently different for a tailwheel airplane than it is for a tri-gear airplane, but there are things you can get by with in a trike that will put you in the weeds (or worse) in a taildragger. Michael (Doug) wrote Client is an instrument rated pilot with his own tailwheel, instrument equipped airplane. Client is current on tailwheel, but lacks currency in IFR. Instructor is CFII and current, but lacks a tailwheel endorsement. Client wants to take off in VFR, and open an IFR flight plan (on the instructors qualifications), and fly the IFR flight plan. Can the instructor file an IFR flight plan and open it in the air (after takeoff) fly the IFR flight plan and cancel IFR before landing with the agreement that the client is PIC for takeoff and landing? It seems to me that the question is "is it necessary to be acting as PIC in order to open and accept an IFR clearance?" because the CFII cannot act as PIC in a tailwheel aircraft, yet he does have "catagory and class" ratings necessary to accept an IFR clearance. But I will have to admit, I really don't know. |
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![]() "Doug" wrote in message om... Yes, but read the section on what is required to accept an IFR clearance There is no such section. There are no rules about "accepting" IFR clearances. The rules only cover requirements on the pilot in command when operating under IFR (which you are when you accept an IFR clearance) It does NOT say the pilot accepting the clearance needs to be "signed off for tailwheel" or other endorsements It doesn't need to. There are dozens of lines in Part 61 that say "No person may act as pilot in command unless ... " You can't just omit some of them. By your logic 61.57 recent flight experience doesn't apply because 61.3 doesn't say you need it. . Nor does it say the pilot accepting the IFR clearance needs to be PIC. As soon as the aircraft starts operating under IFR, the pilot in command must meet the requirements for an instrument rating (as well as all the other pilot in command requirements). make the arguement that the tailwheel pilot is PIC for the entire flight, and the instructor is accepting the IFR clearance. That's fine. But 61.3 says that the pilot in ocmmand under IFR requires an instrument rating and 61.57 says the pilot in command under IFR has to be current. How do you get aroiund that? |
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On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 23:24:32 GMT, "Craig Davidson"
wrote: What's the difference between a tricycle gear airplane and a tail wheel airplane - is it a different category, class or type? A tricycle gear airplane has a nosewheel and two mains. A tail wheel airplane has a tailwheel and two mains. They may or may not be a different category, class or type. However, given the context of your question, you should know that a pilot has to be in compliance with ALL applicable regulations. In the setting of the OP's question, not only is compliance with 14 CFR 61.3(e) required, but also compliance with 14 CFR 61.31(i)(1) .... no person may act as pilot in command of a tailwheel airplane unless that person has received and logged flight training from an authorized instructor in a tailwheel airplane and received an endorsement in the person's logbook from an authorized instructor who found the person proficient in the operation of a tailwheel airplane... Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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![]() "Craig Davidson" wrote in message news:Qit7b.5684 What's the difference between a tricycle gear airplane and a tail wheel airplane - is it a different category, class or type? They're different types, but not in a situation that requires a type rating to fly them. |
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