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#2
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"Jim" wrote in message
news ![]() However, to log PIC time you also must be qualified to act as PIC of that particular aircraft. It is not required that you be qualified to be PIC of a particular aircraft, only the category and class of the aircraft. As an example, if you don't have a high performance endorsement, you will be hard pressed to find an FBO to rent you a C182. However, you could still be a safety pilot in that plane (and log PIC for the time actually spent as safety pilot) if you have a PP-ASEL certificate. -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/tknoFlyer __________ |
#3
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I "think" John Lynch's take on the question is that you must have the
appropriate endorsements to log PIC when acting as safety pilot. If the safety pilot does not act as the legal PIC he/she does not need the proper endorsements, however they may not log the safety pilot time as PIC. New question: Is there ever a case when you can log PIC time when you aren't both properly rated and endorsed? QUESTION: According to § 91.109(b), a safety pilot must possess at least a private certificate with appropriate category & class ratings. Is it necessary for that safety pilot to be "current" in the aircraft (landings, etc.)? Requirements of 61.55 specifically exempt safety pilots [§ 61.55(d)(4)], but where are the safety pilot criteria actually spelled out. Section 61.57 refers to pilot-in-command requirements, but a safety pilot is not PIC, only a required crew member. Further, has there ever been an interpretation that the safety pilot must be Instrument Rated for that type of VFR operation? ANSWER: Ref. § 61.31(d)(1); § 61.51(e)(1)(iii), § 61.51(f)(2), § 61.3(c); § 61.56(c), § 61.57(c); A safety pilot is a "required crewmember" and must hold at least a valid private pilot certificate with category and class ratings appropriate to the aircraft being flown per § 91.109(b) and a valid medical certificate per § 61.3(c). A valid pilot certificate is one which has not been revoked or under suspension. That person who is serving as a safety pilot may choose to act as the legal pilot-in-command (per 14 CFR part 1) and log the time as PIC [per § 61.51(e)(1)(iii)], or otherwise log the time as SIC time [per § 61.51(f)(2)], but is not even required to log the time at all. However, the safety pilot's name must be logged by the person practicing instrument flight [per § 61.51(g)(3)(ii)]. If the safety pilot is going to act as the legal PIC for the flight that person must ". . . Hold the appropriate category, class, and type rating (if a class rating and type rating are required) for the aircraft to be flown;" [per § 61.31(d)(1)]. ). And if the flight is conducted in a high performance, complex, tail wheel, etc. aircraft and the safety pilot is acting as the legal PIC that pilot must have the appropriate endorsements that are required by § 61.31(e), (f) and/or (i), as appropriate. This could be a reason why a safety pilot might only be able to serve as an SIC and log it as SIC time. And assuming the operation is a simulated instrument flight (as in the case the flight is performed in VMC conditions under VFR), the safety pilot would not need to hold an instrument rating. If any portion of the flight were conducted on an IFR flight plan (e.g., in and out of the clouds and/or even on an IFR flight plan) at least one of the pilots must have an instrument rating and the § 1.1 PIC must be instrument current in accordance with § 61.57(c) and be Flight Review current in accordance with § 61.56(c). "John T" wrote in message ws.com... "Jim" wrote in message news ![]() However, to log PIC time you also must be qualified to act as PIC of that particular aircraft. It is not required that you be qualified to be PIC of a particular aircraft, only the category and class of the aircraft. As an example, if you don't have a high performance endorsement, you will be hard pressed to find an FBO to rent you a C182. However, you could still be a safety pilot in that plane (and log PIC for the time actually spent as safety pilot) if you have a PP-ASEL certificate. -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/tknoFlyer __________ |
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"Jim" wrote in message
I "think" John Lynch's take on the question is that you must have the appropriate endorsements to log PIC when acting as safety pilot. If the safety pilot does not act as the legal PIC he/she does not need the proper endorsements, however they may not log the safety pilot time as PIC. Yeah, I already posted a retraction on my first answer. SIC would be allowed under these circumstances, though. -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/tknoFlyer __________ |
#5
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"Jim" wrote in message ...
It is my understanding (always subject to correction) that as a safety pilot you may log PIC time because you are indeed a required crew member for the operation. However, to log PIC time you also must be qualified to act as PIC of that particular aircraft. Well you could log SIC, but to log PIC but must **BE** pilot in command, not just qualified. To log SIC you only need cat/class/type if required. |
#6
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![]() Well you could log SIC, but to log PIC but must **BE** pilot in command, not just qualified. To log SIC you only need cat/class/type if required. And the aircraft has to require two pilots. Walt |
#7
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Not the aircraft, just the flight operation. Simulated instrument flight
with a safety pilot = two pilots even if it's in a C150. The safety pilots certification, ratings, currency, and endorsements determine his ability to log PIC vs SIC. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply "B25flyer" wrote in message ... Well you could log SIC, but to log PIC but must **BE** pilot in command, not just qualified. To log SIC you only need cat/class/type if required. And the aircraft has to require two pilots. Walt |
#8
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#9
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message om... (B25flyer) wrote in message ... Well you could log SIC, but to log PIC but must **BE** pilot in command, not just qualified. To log SIC you only need cat/class/type if required. And the aircraft has to require two pilots. Or the regulation requires more than one crew. "is acting as pilot in command of an^M aircraft on which more than one pilot is required under the type^M certification of the aircraft or the regulations under which the flight is^M conducted.^M" So in a CitationJet/CJ1/CJ2/Bravo that only requires one pilot, but typically has two, the co-pilot is just going along for the ride? |
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