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#41
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Roy Smith wrote:
"Cirrus" wrote: I usually only file my last name, and have never received a single question by the briefer about it. Do any of you know if you are supposed to file first and last name? I don't know of any regulation which requires you to put down two names in the PIC box. How about 91.153 which requires the "FULL NAME OF THE PILOT IN COMMAND"? |
#42
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Brad wrote:
Either way, I'd have a hard time believing that the flight plan would be the determinant information of who was PIC for a flight when more than one pilot could serve as PIC. It's not. Specifically not in an enforcement action. The FAA goes after whoever they determine they can injure the most with the action. |
#43
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Dave Butler wrote:
Brad wrote: Funny, I don't remember filing dual XC flights for my private under my instructor's name either. A VFR flight plan is a whole different animal, never gets beyond FSS. Nobody will care who is listed as PIC on a VFR flight plan, it's only used for SAR. Nobody cares any more or less on a VFR or IFR plan. The rule is for VFR plans (inheritted into the IFR plan). The PIC name goes NOWHERE other than for the SAR record. ATC NEVER SEES IT. |
#44
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In article ,
Ron Natalie wrote: Mark Hansen wrote: As PIC, the CFII would be the one officially accepting the clearance (or not) - non-verbally. The student would only be copying it to paper and reading it back. It's not even so involved. The student can accept the clearance. The PIC is just ultimately responsible. Command is more of a responsibility thing than any particular act. That's not true. Being in command is the act of getting screwed when things go wrong and they need to blame somebody. |
#45
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(c) Instrument experience. Except as provided in paragraph
(e) of this section, no person may act as pilot in command under IFR or in weather conditions less than the minimums prescribed for VFR, unless within the preceding 6 calendar months, that person has: so you're correct, you can file, but you can't fly. "Ron Natalie" wrote in message ... | Jim Macklin wrote: | The reason is in the FAR, you have to be a certificated and | current instrument rated pilot, in an aircraft certified for | IFR flight to file an IFR flight plan. | | No such FAR. | | Simply filing the flight plan OR operating in IMC condition | is a violation. IFR flight plan in VMC is a violation | unless the PIC NAMED, not just PIC is legal. | | PIC must be named on ANY flight plan (IFR or VFR). | 91.153 (a)(3) The full name and address of the pilot in command. | | The IFR plan only adds the alternate airport. |
#46
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Brad wrote:
Dave Butler wrote: A VFR flight plan is a whole different animal, never gets beyond FSS. Nobody will care who is listed as PIC on a VFR flight plan, it's only used for SAR. Sure, I know that. But the regs (91.157) specify listing the PIC for a VFR flight plan. In the event of a hypothetical accident resulting from a non-instuctional flight flown by a certified private pilot with a flight instructor on board, could the CFI deny PIC responsibility on the basis of the PIC listed in the flight plan, if filed by the private pilot? Only the NTSB or the FAA can answer that question, and if I got an answer to it, I wouldn't believe it. By the way, the pilot's name never gets beyond FSS for either VFR or IFR. Otherwise you might hear a controller say: "Dave, you are cleared to Anytown airport as filed, maintain 3000..." OK. |
#47
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Jim Macklin wrote:
The reason is in the FAR, you have to be a certificated and current instrument rated pilot, in an aircraft certified for IFR flight to file an IFR flight plan. There is no requirement for an instrument rating for *filing* an instrument flight plan, only for accepting a clearance. There is no requirement for any kind of aircraft certification for *filing* a flight plan. Simply filing the flight plan OR operating in IMC condition is a violation. Filing a flight plan is not a violation. IFR flight plan in VMC is a violation unless the PIC NAMED, not just PIC is legal. Meteorological conditions have nothing to do with it. I don't find a regulation that uses the terminology "PIC NAMED". Perhaps there is case law. |
#48
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Roy Smith wrote:
ATC only sees some subset of the fields you file in your flight plan. I don't remember exactly which ones they get (everything up to the REMARKS section?), but the PIC's name isn't one of them. All that stuff about home base, souls on board, paint color, etc, is purely for SAR and accident investigation purposes. ATC sees the first few characters of the REMARKS, but the string length is limited. I forget how many characters they see. e.g. if I remark "PLA FAY", ATC knows I plan to do practice low approaches at Fayetteville. |
#49
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Ron Natalie wrote:
Brad wrote: Either way, I'd have a hard time believing that the flight plan would be the determinant information of who was PIC for a flight when more than one pilot could serve as PIC. It's not. Specifically not in an enforcement action. The FAA goes after whoever they determine they can injure the most with the action. Another way to look at it, they go after the required crew member(s). |
#50
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Roy N5804F wrote:
The person who is ABLE to legally recieve the clearance is who's name is listed as PIC. The student can file.. but the CFII's name goes on the plan. How do the heavy crews handle this stuff. ? Does the dispatcher list who is PIC ? Roy Depends upon the carrier. The one I worked for did not pass any crew information to the FAA. It is an entirely different ballgame with a FAR-required dispatch office and reams of FAA-approved operational control procedures. And, the air carrier flight plan required for international operations is very different than the FAA flight plan form. I think you would have to complete the same ICAO form if you were flying from Los Angeles to New Zealand in your G550. ;-) |
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