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#11
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Bruce:
You're not exactly right regarding glider cross-country time. In the USA, the FAA on form 8710 (Airman Certificate or Rating Application) asks for (amongst other things) Cross Country Time (Instruction, solo and PIC). My local district office agreed that the definition given for airplanes was not applicable to this form. They also confirmed that the definition for glider cross-country time is not given in any FAA documentation and that I should use the "conventional gliding community definition of flight time beyond gliding distance of the home field". You can't use this time for any rating where a cross-country flight requires a landing. However, if you do land more than 50 miles from home, you can use this logged glider time for some airplane ratings. We discussed this not long ago on RAS, as I remember. Mike ASW 20 WA |
#12
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"Mike the Strike" wrote in message
oups.com... Bruce: You're not exactly right regarding glider cross-country time. In the USA, the FAA on form 8710 (Airman Certificate or Rating Application) asks for (amongst other things) Cross Country Time (Instruction, solo and PIC). My local district office agreed that the definition given The only reason for the "logging of cross country" time for gliders on the Form.. so if you ever loose a log book, you can at least try to rebuild from the last form filed. Glider ratings do not require accumulated cross country time, as airplane ratings do. Also, it is just a place to collect data points for their statistics of what type of flying activity is occurring. BT |
#13
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"J.A.M." wrote in message
... I think Cross country (or distance flight) is whatever takes you out of local gliding range of your home airport... That is, when you need to take a thermal, get some heigh, or you land out. What you think is not according to hoyle, IAW with US 14CFR BT |
#14
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Marian Aldenhövel wrote:
Hi, I saw a posting on a web site about Steve Fossett's around the world flight. Just think, since he landed at the same airport that he took off from, he can't log that flight as 'cross country flight'. Was that the same website that said he could log an outside loop for the flight? LOL |
#15
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"f.blair" wrote in message link.net...
I saw a posting on a web site about Steve Fossett's around the world flight. He didn't go around the world, only around the north end, a shorter distance. He never crossed the equator (among great circles). -- Plane Jain http://www.rev.net/~aloe/geography |
#17
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Bruce Hoult wrote in message ...
In article , (The Green Troll) wrote: He didn't go around the world, only around the north end, a shorter distance. He never crossed the equator (among great circles). He used what the FAI definition has *always* been. Yeah, so it would be nice if the definition involved flying over at least one pair of points that are the opposite each other, but it's not. The FAI is no authority on geometry. I hope some pilot defies that warped pretense by flying over both poles. -- Lead Baron http://www.rev.net/~aloe/geography |
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