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#1
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![]() "Slav Inger" wrote in message ... It's been awhile since I flew VFR, and having taken a cursory look through Part 61 I didn't see anything to the contrary, so I'm going to throw this out and see what you guys think. It's my understanding that I can take a VFR-only airplane on a local VFR trip with a PP-rated safety pilot on board, wear foggles, shoot simulated instrument approaches and log those approaches as instrument approaches AND log the entire time as PIC. Correct or incorrect? The only requirement to log instrument time is to fly the aircraft by reference to instruments in simulated or actual conditions. There is no requirement for the aircraft (or the pilot) to be rated for IFR (as long as they don't actually operate under IFR). |
#2
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On a similar note (and this one I'm less sure about than my original
question), is there any way the safety pilot can log the time he spends being the safety pilot? I know my logging requirements as PIC under simulated instrument conditions (SP's name, etc), but I'm not exactly sure what the SP himself can log. Thanks. - Slav Inger - PP ASEL IA @ YIP |
#3
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Slav Inger wrote:
On a similar note (and this one I'm less sure about than my original question), is there any way the safety pilot can log the time he spends being the safety pilot? I know my logging requirements as PIC under simulated instrument conditions (SP's name, etc), but I'm not exactly sure what the SP himself can log. Thanks. Oh, almost forgot: I don't think I can split the cost of the flight with the safety pilot, can I? Since I wanted to go practice instrument approaches and asked/needed someone to be my safety pilot, the SP is no longer "just a passenger". Since his presence in the airplane is not coincidental, I'm assuming that I can't charge him 50% of the cost. - Slav Inger - PP ASEL IA @ YIP |
#4
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 15:09:37 -0400, Slav Inger
wrote: Oh, almost forgot: I don't think I can split the cost of the flight with the safety pilot, can I? Since I wanted to go practice instrument approaches and asked/needed someone to be my safety pilot, the SP is no longer "just a passenger". Since his presence in the airplane is not coincidental, I'm assuming that I can't charge him 50% of the cost. I don't see why not. You're sharing the flight and you're both logging flight time. The rule about sharing costs is designed to prevent you from charging people for acting as a pilot, not to prevent two pilots from sharing the cost of an airplane that they both get a benefit from. Mark Kolber APA/Denver, Colorado www.midlifeflight.com ====================== email? Remove ".no.spam" |
#5
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Oh, almost forgot: I don't think I can split the cost of the flight with
the safety pilot, can I? Since I wanted to go practice instrument approaches and asked/needed someone to be my safety pilot, the SP is no longer "just a passenger". Since his presence in the airplane is not coincidental, I'm assuming that I can't charge him 50% of the cost. In the literal sense of the word, you can't "charge" him anything without holding a commercial ticket. You have by the way, ruffled my feathers here. First, I, personally, wouldn't ask a stranger to ride safety for me. Second, asking someone I know and trust to ride safety for me is asking them for a favor and I wouldn't have the temerity to require them to compensate me for doing that favor. I dunno, sounds kind of rude... "Hey Billy Bob, will you pay me $50 an hour to be my safety pilot?" |
#6
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Casey Wilson wrote:
First, I, personally, wouldn't ask a stranger to ride safety for me. Second, asking someone I know and trust to ride safety for me is asking them for a favor and I wouldn't have the temerity to require them to compensate me for doing that favor. I dunno, sounds kind of rude... "Hey Billy Bob, will you pay me $50 an hour to be my safety pilot?" Close but no cigar, Casey. First, he's not a stranger, I've known and been flying with this person for quite a while. Second, I never asked for money on any of the trips we've taken together, and at times when he voluntarily offered I always took significantly less than the 50%. All I was asking here was, IF he offers me anything on his own initiative, is it legal to accept up to 50% of the cost. Apparently it is. P.S. I'll agree that the using word "charge" in my post came across a bit too strong, so I see where you're coming from. - Slav Inger - PP ASEL IA @ YIP |
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