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#2
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Michael wrote:
: The situation you described (almost) was SOP at a flight school in the : Houston area. The specific situation was a hooded pilot in the left : seat of a Seminole flying instruments and logging PIC (as sole : manipulator) and dual received, another pilot in the right seat : watching for traffic and acting as PIC and logging it, and a CFII/MEI : in the back seat giving instrument dual and logging PIC and dual : given. : They did it this way for years. Nobody was busted, nobody lost his : logged time - but once it got out, they stopped doing it. I read about that one. I know it's "frowned upon," but the situation I'm envisioning isn't to try to get the most loggable PIC time, but rather to keep insurance requirements from being ridiculous for low-time in type. More of an insurance requirement than an FAA logging issue.... although I guess one could use it for that as well. : It's not all that gray an area: : 91.109 (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft (except a manned : free balloon) that is being used for flight instruction unless that : aircraft has fully functioning dual controls. : It doesn't actually say that the instructor must sit at the other : control seat, but it's tough to argue that this wasn't the intent of : the regulation. : Michael My spin on this is that the FAA like to leave the regulations vague enough for them to weasel out of any wrongdoing should an incident occur. Since they will find something to bust you for no matter what happened, you might as well interpret the imprecise legaleeze (sleaze?) to your advantage. Again... if nobody has a problem then there's no problem. -Cory ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#3
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It's not all that gray an area:
91.109 (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft (except a manned free balloon) that is being used for flight instruction unless that aircraft has fully functioning dual controls. How does a pilot get checked off in a Bonanza??? |
#4
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WARREN1157 wrote:
It's not all that gray an area: 91.109 (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft (except a manned free balloon) that is being used for flight instruction unless that aircraft has fully functioning dual controls. How does a pilot get checked off in a Bonanza??? If it involves FAA-required flight instruction (other than the instrument training specifically exempted), then they need to get dual controls rather than the throw over. Getting "checked out" isn't an FAA concept, however. |
#5
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![]() "WARREN1157" wrote in message ... It's not all that gray an area: 91.109 (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft (except a manned free balloon) that is being used for flight instruction unless that aircraft has fully functioning dual controls. How does a pilot get checked off in a Bonanza??? Michael did not quote the whole regulation. Nevertheless, I suppose some twit could make a case that you cannot give a BFR, complex, or high performance endorsement in a Bonanza or, for that matter, do any instruction except instrument training. There was a bit of a flap a couple years ago where some inspector was insisting that unless his side had brakes, the airplane did not have fully functioning dual controls. Fortunately, the FAA ruled that it was not essential for both sides to have brakes. This is an excellent example of a regulation that you could suggest a change. § 91.109 Flight instruction; Simulated instrument flight and certain flight tests. (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft (except a manned free balloon) that is being used for flight instruction unless that aircraft has fully functioning dual controls. However, instrument flight instruction may be given in a single-engine airplane equipped with a single, functioning throwover control wheel in place of fixed, dual controls of the elevator and ailerons when— (1) The instructor has determined that the flight can be conducted safely; and (2) The person manipulating the controls has at least a private pilot certificate with appropriate category and class ratings. |
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"C J Campbell" wrote
Michael did not quote the whole regulation. Nevertheless, I suppose some twit could make a case that you cannot give a BFR, complex, or high performance endorsement in a Bonanza or, for that matter, do any instruction except instrument training. If you had made it down to Houston before the last FSDO shakeup, I could have introduced you to that particular twit. He was a bigwig at our FSDO. It was also his position that checkrides are not to be given in an airplane with a throwover yoke - not even instrument checkrides. Really he didn't want to see ANY instruction going on with a throwover yoke, but he couldn't stop instrument instruction because the part of the reg I didn't quote made it so cut and dried. Michael |
#7
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Michael wrote:
It was also his position that checkrides are not to be given in an airplane with a throwover yoke - not even instrument checkrides. Really he didn't want to see ANY instruction going on with a throwover yoke, but he couldn't stop instrument instruction because the part of the reg I didn't quote made it so cut and dried. So how does he avoid the similar provision in the checkride reg? |
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