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#21
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"John T" wrote
In a single pilot airplane, it is fine for the person to log PIC even if he is not current, as long as there is someone current on board Not really. I think the confusion stems from the use of "PIC" in two similar but logically separate functions. There's the guy in charge of the flight and there's the guy manipulating the controls. Think of it as "pilot in command" and "pilot in control". They're both PIC and they may both log PIC for the same hour. (See "safety pilot".) The Navy solved the problem very simply. The "assigned PIC" is always the PIC (and logs PIC) no matter where he/she sits or what he/she does. The pilot manipulating the controls logs "First Pilot" time. The pilot assisting the "First Pilot" logs "Second Pilot" time. Actually, during my stay in the P-3 Navy, the term "Patrol Plane Commander" was used in place of the FAA term "Pilot-in-Command". Bob Moore |
#22
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![]() Truly I wish the FAA would fix this and make acting as PIC and logging PIC the same. I wish they would fix is by changing the words. What you log and what you are are supposed to be different. That they are given the same name is the error. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#23
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"Teacherjh" wrote in message
... Truly I wish the FAA would fix this and make acting as PIC and logging PIC the same. I wish they would fix is by changing the words. What you log and what you are are supposed to be different. That they are given the same name is the error. Absolutely. And they compound the confusion by not even interpreting the regs as written. The FARs' distinction between "instrument meteorological conditions", on the one hand, and "instrument conditions" or "instrument flight conditions", on the other, is another example of abysmally confusing terminology. --Gary |
#24
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#25
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#26
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote in message . 8... "John T" wrote In a single pilot airplane, it is fine for the person to log PIC even if he is not current, as long as there is someone current on board Not really. I think the confusion stems from the use of "PIC" in two similar but logically separate functions. There's the guy in charge of the flight and there's the guy manipulating the controls. Think of it as "pilot in command" and "pilot in control". They're both PIC and they may both log PIC for the same hour. (See "safety pilot".) The Navy solved the problem very simply. The Navy is not the FAA. |
#27
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![]() "John T" wrote in message ws.com... "zatatime" wrote in message In a single pilot airplane, it is fine for the person to log PIC even if he is not current, as long as there is someone current on board acting as PIC. Let's expand this scenario a bit. Let's say that my instrument currency has lapsed and before I can schedule a flight, my night currency lapses, too. I find a pilot friend (who is current) to fly safety pilot. Who logs the PIC time for the duration I'm the only one manipulating the controls flying approaches during a night flight? You both do. You as sole manipulator of the controls, the safety pilot as a required crewmember acting as PIC. ...I still find it bizarre. I personally do not find it bizarre at all. I think the FAA's approach is both simple and elegant. |
#28
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Ok, so to throw another hypothetical in the loop, if I'm flying safety
pilot, and we go to an airport more than 50 miles away, does it count as x-country PIC for my instrument rating. From what my instructor tells me, I'm nearly ready for checkride, I just need to meet x-c requirements, sooooooo if a friend and I make an hour and a half flight to OKC and back, each flying one way and safety pilot the other, we both log 2.8 PIC and 2.8 X-C???? (subtracting a tenth for takeoff and landing when acting as safety pilot, since that won't be done under the hood and not really safety pilot, just a passenger then). Trying to figure out just how confusing the FARs can be C J Campbell wrote: "John T" wrote in message ws.com... "zatatime" wrote in message m In a single pilot airplane, it is fine for the person to log PIC even if he is not current, as long as there is someone current on board acting as PIC. Let's expand this scenario a bit. Let's say that my instrument currency has lapsed and before I can schedule a flight, my night currency lapses, too. I find a pilot friend (who is current) to fly safety pilot. Who logs the PIC time for the duration I'm the only one manipulating the controls flying approaches during a night flight? You both do. You as sole manipulator of the controls, the safety pilot as a required crewmember acting as PIC. ...I still find it bizarre. I personally do not find it bizarre at all. I think the FAA's approach is both simple and elegant. |
#29
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"Matt Young" wrote in message
ink.net... [...] if a friend and I make an hour and a half flight to OKC and back, each flying one way and safety pilot the other, we both log 2.8 PIC and 2.8 X-C???? Assuming you and your friend agree that the safety pilot will be acting PIC, yes. BTW, one question mark suffices. A sentence is either a question or it's not. You can't make it MORE of a question by adding question marks. Pete |
#30
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Peter Duniho wrote:
...one question mark suffices. A sentence is either a question or it's not. You can't make it MORE of a question by adding question marks. And you can't make your criticisms more appropriate by putting two spaces after a period instead of one, as though you were still using a typewriter. Matt's question was about logging flight time, not about English composition. Jack |
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