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#11
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Below is a copy of an FAA Chief Counsel written opinion:
================== Legal Interpretation # 92-52 October 30, 1992 Mr. David M. Reid Dear Mr. Reid: Thank you for your letter of June 12, 1992, concerning the logging of pilot-in-command (PIC) time under the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR). In your letter you ask four questions. First, you ask whether there are "any circumstances when, during a normal flight, two Private Pilots may simultaneously act as (and therefore log the time as) Pilot-In-Command?" The answer is two private pilots may not simultaneously act as PIC but they may, under certain circumstances, simultaneously log PIC time. There is a difference between serving as PIC and logging PIC time. PIC, as defined in FAR 1.1, means the pilot responsible for the operation and safety of an aircraft during flight time. FAR 61.51 deals with logging PIC flight time, and it provides that a private or commercial pilot may log as PIC time only that flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which he is rated, or when he is the sole occupant of the aircraft, or when he acts as PIC of an aircraft on which more than one pilot is required under the type certification of the aircraft, or the regulations under which the flight is conducted. It is important to note that FAR 61.51 only regulates the recording of PIC time used to meet the requirements toward a higher certificate, higher rating, or for recent flight experience. Therefore, while it is not possible for two pilots to act as PIC simultaneously, it is possible for two pilots to log PIC flight time simultaneously. PIC flight time may be logged by both the PIC responsible for the operation and safety of the aircraft during flight time in accordance with FAR 1.1, and by the pilot who acts as the sole manipulator of the controls of the aircraft for which the pilot is rated under FAR 61.51. Enclosed please find two prior FAA interpretations concerning logging of PIC time. We hope that these will be of further assistance to you. In your second question you ask "[h]ow shall two Private Pilots log their flight time when one pilot is under the hood for simulated instrument time and the other pilot acts as safety pilot?" The answer is the pilot who is under the hood may log PIC time for that flight time in which he is the sole manipulator of the controls of the aircraft, provided he is rated for that aircraft. The appropriately rated safety pilot may concurrently log as second in command (SIC) that time during which he is acting as safety pilot. The two pilots may, however, agree prior to initiating the flight that the safety pilot will be the PIC responsible for the operation and safety of the aircraft during the flight. If this is done, then the safety pilot may log all the flight time as PIC time in accordance with FAR 1.1 and the pilot under the hood may log, concurrently, all of the flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls as PIC time in accordance with FAR 61.51(c)(2)(i). Enclosed please find a prior FAA interpretation concerning the logging of flight time under simulated instrument flight conditions. We hope that this interpretation will be of further assistance to you. In your third question you ask "[d]uring instrument training, how shall a VFR Private Pilot log the following flight time: Pilot-In-Command time, Simulated Instrument time, and Actual Instrument time, when that pilot is ... A) ... under the hood? B) ...in actual instrument conditions? C) ... under the hood in actual instrument conditions?" The answer is the VFR private pilot may log all of the flight time you described as PIC flight time under FAR 61.51(c)(2)(i) if he was the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which he is rated. Under FAR 61.51(c)(4) the pilot may log as instrument flight time only that time during which he operates the aircraft solely by reference to instruments, under actual or simulated instrument flight conditions. Please note that the FARs do not distinguish between "actual" and "simulated" instrument flight time. Enclosed is a prior FAA interpretation concerning the logging of instrument flight time. We hope this interpretation will further assist you. Finally you ask "[d]oes FAR 61.57 affect how the VFR Private Pilot shall log Pilot-In-Command time during instrument training, either before or after meeting the 6/6/6 requirement, and if so, how?" FAR 61.57 does not affect how a pilot logs PIC time during instrument training; FAR 61.51(c)(2) and (4) govern logging of instrument flight time. FAR 61.57(e) provides currency requirements for acting as PIC under instrument flight rules (IFR) or in weather conditions less than the minimums for visual flight rules (VFR). Enclosed please find a prior FAA interpretation on instrument flight time and FAR 61.57(e). We hope this interpretation will further assist you. We hope this satisfactorily answers your questions. Sincerely, /s/ Donald P. Byrne Assistant Chief Counsel Regulations Division |
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#13
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Hmmmm...
From Legal Interpretation # 92-52: The two pilots may, however, agree prior to initiating the flight that the safety pilot will be the PIC responsible for the operation and safety of the aircraft during the flight. If this is done, then the safety pilot may log all the flight time as PIC time in accordance with FAR 1.1 and the pilot under the hood may log, concurrently, all of the flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls as PIC time in accordance with FAR 61.51(c)(2)(i). Enclosed please find a prior FAA interpretation concerning the logging of flight time under simulated instrument flight conditions. We hope that this interpretation will be of further assistance to you. This seems to say that the entire flight, including takeoff, landing, and the part where the other pilot was sole manipulator while VFR and not under the hood, could be loggable by the safety pilot as PIC time. This implies that a pilot may log PIC time ("in accordance with FAR 1.1") when he acts as PIC, irrespective of the number of pilots required, and irrespective of who is sole manipulator. This seems to contradict FAR 61.51(e)(1), which in (iii) provides for time when acting as PIC in a multi-pilot-required situation, but does not address multi-pilot-used-but-not-required situations. By its omission there one may infer it is intended to be omitted. I wonder if the Chief Councel intended this contradiction. I've found that Legal Interpretations are not all that well worded. Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#14
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On Wed, 14 Dec 2005 09:01:37 -0800, Mark Hansen
wrote: On 12/14/2005 08:48, wrote: Below is a copy of an FAA Chief Counsel written opinion: How does answer the question set forth by the original poster? His question was about logging x-country time, which the referenced legal interpretation doesn't touch. It does say: The two pilots may, however, agree prior to initiating the flight that the safety pilot will be the PIC responsible for the operation and safety of the aircraft during the flight. If this is done, then the safety pilot may log all the flight time as PIC time in accordance with FAR 1.1 and the pilot under the hood may log, concurrently, all of the flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls as PIC time in accordance with FAR 61.51(c)(2)(i). So, if the flight is XC, wouldn't this allow both (assuming the prior PF/PNF/ultimate safety condition is met) to log both PIC and XC (but no landings for PNF) time? |
#15
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On 12/14/2005 09:40, Peter Clark wrote:
On Wed, 14 Dec 2005 09:01:37 -0800, Mark Hansen wrote: On 12/14/2005 08:48, wrote: Below is a copy of an FAA Chief Counsel written opinion: How does answer the question set forth by the original poster? His question was about logging x-country time, which the referenced legal interpretation doesn't touch. It does say: The two pilots may, however, agree prior to initiating the flight that the safety pilot will be the PIC responsible for the operation and safety of the aircraft during the flight. If this is done, then the safety pilot may log all the flight time as PIC time in accordance with FAR 1.1 and the pilot under the hood may log, concurrently, all of the flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls as PIC time in accordance with FAR 61.51(c)(2)(i). So, if the flight is XC, wouldn't this allow both (assuming the prior PF/PNF/ultimate safety condition is met) to log both PIC and XC (but no landings for PNF) time? So what about the time when the left-seat pilot is not under the hood. It sounds to me like they are making an exception for this case. Can the safety pilot be PIC even while the left-seat pilot is not under the hood? ... seems like a stretch to me. -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane Sacramento, CA |
#16
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To each his own, Hilton. Unless I am sitting in the left seat and doing all
the work, I do not log things just because I can find regulations that support doing so. No logging of approaches performed by a student, no logging of PIC if I'm really the safety pilot, etc. Bob "Hilton" wrote in message nk.net... Bob Gardner wrote: Maybe it's me, but I wouldn't consider for a moment logging a trip that I had not personally planned and flown on my own. A few years ago, I figured that since I wasn't PIC for the takeoff and landing, that I couldn't log XC PIC - assuming I was safety pilot and acting as PIC while the other gyu was under the hood. Then I read Part 61.1, and the time on a XC that you log PIC, you can also log XC, assuming all the other requirements are met. Hilton |
#17
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Can the safety pilot be PIC even while the left-seat pilot is not under
the hood? I'm guessing, no, based on: (g) Logging instrument flight time. (1) A person may log instrument time only for that flight time when the person operates the aircraft solely by reference to instruments under actual or simulated instrument flight conditions. In simulated conditions, once the hood is removed, it would seem to me that only one or the other could be PIC at that point??? So... I'm beginning to sway to the side of, logging XC as safety pilot seems to be a stretch! Another good argument for getting that instructor rating: (3) An authorized instructor may log as pilot-in-command time all flight time while acting as an authorized instructor. |
#18
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Mark Hansen wrote:
So what about the time when the left-seat pilot is not under the hood. It sounds to me like they are making an exception for this case. Can the safety pilot be PIC even while the left-seat pilot is not under the hood? ... seems like a stretch to me. To begin with, there is no safety pilot when the pilot flying is not under the hood. So your "Can the safety pilot..." question doesn't make sense. Aside from that, there is no requirement that the acting PIC is actually manipulating the controls. Anyone aboard with the proper credentials can act as PIC. |
#19
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On 12/14/2005 10:25, three-eight-hotel wrote:
Can the safety pilot be PIC even while the left-seat pilot is not under the hood? I'm guessing, no, based on: (g) Logging instrument flight time. (1) A person may log instrument time only for that flight time when the person operates the aircraft solely by reference to instruments under actual or simulated instrument flight conditions. In simulated conditions, once the hood is removed, it would seem to me that only one or the other could be PIC at that point??? Well, that was my argument. One way to interpret the regs is that both would be able to log PIC, although only one could be PIC. So... I'm beginning to sway to the side of, logging XC as safety pilot seems to be a stretch! Also, each pilot needs to decide what is the point of logging such time. If it is to show that you have the experience necessary to afford you an advanced rating, you would really want to have that experience. Personally, I don't think flying as a safety pilot for another pilot on a x-country flight provides me the same x-country 'experience' as making the flight myself. Another good argument for getting that instructor rating: (3) An authorized instructor may log as pilot-in-command time all flight time while acting as an authorized instructor. -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane Sacramento, CA |
#20
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...and the pilot under the hood may log, concurrently, all of the
flight time during which he is the sole manipulator of the controls as PIC time.... The pilot under the hood can log PIC for "all of the flight time during which he is sole manipulator of the controls". If he is not under the hood, he can't log THAT flight time. So he can't log the landing (unless they can figure out a safe way of landing with the pilot under the hood being "sole manipulator of the controls"). Seems clear enough to me. As for whether the pilot under the hood can log the flight time he logs as PIC as crosscountry....who knows? THAT is not in the FARs either way. So you are free to make your own interpretation, I guess, so long as everyone who signs you off is also in agreement with you, with the caveat that someone might disagree with your interpretation. And if that someone is senior to you, it could cause problems. Some situations aren't in the FARs. I own an Amphib and there is quite a bit of ambiguity about exactly how to log it, mostly revolving around do you log it as a Seaplane if you don't land on a lake on that flight? And can a non-seaplane rated pilot someone else flying the plane besides me) be legal as PIC in the plane (if otherwise legal in it as a landplane)? I have my way of doing it, it is my interpretation, but like I say, some things aren't in the FARs. |
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