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Are there any accepted conventions for retroactively correcting logbook
errors? I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. Any suggestions for correcting this error? Rather than making messy corrections and recalculating page totals, how about adding a "corrective" (new) entry? |
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"Marty Ross" wrote:
Are there any accepted conventions for retroactively correcting logbook errors? No. nothing that's totally standard. I line through the mistake and write in the correction. I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. Why not? Were you sole manipulator of the controls and rated in the aircraft? If so, it's loggable 61.51(e) PIC time. Todd Pattist (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) ___ Make a commitment to learn something from every flight. Share what you learn. |
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On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 13:50:31 -0400, Todd Pattist
wrote in Message-Id: : I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. Why not? Were you sole manipulator of the controls and rated in the aircraft? If so, it's loggable 61.51(e) PIC time. Of course, that's not true for student pilots. While not unheard of, most IFR students are not student pilots. However, all student pilots do receive instrument training. http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...C?OpenDocument Sec. 61.51 (4) A student pilot may log pilot-in-command time only when the student pilot-- (i) Is the sole occupant of the aircraft or is performing the duties of pilot of command of an airship requiring more than one pilot flight crewmember; ii) Has a current solo flight endorsement as required under Sec. 61.87 of this part; and (iii) Is undergoing training for a pilot certificate or rating -- Irrational beliefs ultimately lead to irrational acts. -- Larry Dighera, |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
Were you sole manipulator of the controls and rated in the aircraft? If so, it's loggable 61.51(e) PIC time. Of course, that's not true for student pilots. Well, technically, it *is* true for student pilots. You missed the "rated in the aircraft" part of my statement. It's true, because I said only pilots who were *both* "sole manipulator of the controls" *and* "rated in the aircraft" could log the time, and no student is "rated in the aircraft." Todd Pattist (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) ___ Make a commitment to learn something from every flight. Share what you learn. |
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On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 10:19:39 -0400, Todd Pattist
wrote in Message-Id: : Larry Dighera wrote: Were you sole manipulator of the controls and rated in the aircraft? If so, it's loggable 61.51(e) PIC time. Of course, that's not true for student pilots. Well, technically, it *is* true for student pilots. I would define a Student Pilot as one who holds a Student Pilot Certificate ONLY, no Airmans Certificate. (I'll use that definition throughout my reply.) A student who holds _only_ a Student Pilot Certificate can NOT log PIC time in actual instrument conditions, because FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i)* requires him to be the sole occupant of the aircraft to log PIC time. Can we can agree, that a competent CFI(I) would not permit a student pilot to solo in IMC (nor under a vision restricting device)? If a Student Pilot found himself in IMC while soloing, he might be able to log that actual instrument time as PIC time, but in all likelihood, posthumously. :-) You missed the "rated in the aircraft" part of my statement. Not really. I wasn't disagreeing with your statement. I was just attempting to provide additional, complementary information. It's true, because I said only pilots who were *both* "sole manipulator of the controls" *and* "rated in the aircraft" could log the time, and no student is "rated in the aircraft." When you state, "it's true," the antecedent of your use of the pronoun 'it' is ambagious. If you are referring to Student Pilots logging IMC PIC time, that is prohibited by regulation FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i), because they can't solo in IMC. I am not aware of a requirement for Student Pilots to be "rated in the aircraft" to be permitted to log PIC time. Indeed, Student Pilots' solo time is permitted by regulation to be logged as PIC time. If you're referring to pilots who hold an _Airmans_ _Certificate_ and are receiving instrument instruction from a CFII, indeed FAR 61.65(e)(1)(i) does permit logging PIC time when the pilot is sole manipulator of the controls of the aircraft in which he is rated. However, such a pilot is not a Student Pilot. It's not entirely clear from Marty Ross' article whether he held a Student Pilot Certificate or Airmans Certificate during the time he accrued the actual instrument experience to which he was referring. Here's what he said: I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. While an Instrument Student training for an IFR rating must hold an Airmans Certificate, a Student Pilot does receive instrument instruction, but he can not log it as PIC time (unless he is solo). It appears, that implicit in your reply (indicating that instrument PIC time is loggable) was the presumption that the student held an Airmans Certificate (otherwise he wouldn't be rated in the aircraft). I chose to mention the regulations effective for students who do not hold an Airmans Certificate. You seem to have erroneously interpreted that as disagreeing with your statement, and failed to note that Student Pilots need not be "rated in the aircraft" to log PIC time. Misunderstandings are common when ambiguities are not addressed, and articles are not thoroughly read and comprehended. I know it happens to me. (Of course, this entire discussion is limited to Aircraft Category operations, and ignores Part 141 training.) * For convenient reference, here's a link to the regulations: http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...e?OpenFrameSet -- Irrational beliefs ultimately lead to irrational acts. -- Larry Dighera, |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
I would define a Student Pilot as one who holds a Student Pilot Certificate ONLY, no Airmans Certificate. So would I. A student who holds _only_ a Student Pilot Certificate can NOT log PIC time in actual instrument conditions, I agree. because FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i)* requires him to be the sole occupant of the aircraft to log PIC time. Can we can agree, that a competent CFI(I) would not permit a student pilot to solo in IMC (nor under a vision restricting device)? Yes. If a Student Pilot found himself in IMC while soloing, he might be able to log that actual instrument time as PIC time, but in all likelihood, posthumously. :-) Agreed You missed the "rated in the aircraft" part of my statement. Not really. I wasn't disagreeing with your statement. I was just attempting to provide additional, complementary information. It's true, because I said only pilots who were *both* "sole manipulator of the controls" *and* "rated in the aircraft" could log the time, and no student is "rated in the aircraft." When you state, "it's true," the antecedent of your use of the pronoun 'it' is ambagious. "It" referred to my statement that you can log PIC when rated in the aircraft and sole manipulating the controls under 61.51(e)(1). Since a student is not rated in the aircraft, he can't log PIC (under 61.51(e)(1))even when manipulating the controls. You said "Of course, that's not true for student pilots." and I responded it was a technically true statement for student pilots as well as non-students. Applied to students, they can't log because they are not rated. Applied to rated pilots, they can log because they are rated. If you are referring to Student Pilots logging IMC PIC time, that is prohibited by regulation FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i), because they can't solo in IMC. Agreed. I am not aware of a requirement for Student Pilots to be "rated in the aircraft" to be permitted to log PIC time. They are required to be rated if they want to log under 61.51(e)(1), which they can't do, since by definition they aren't rated in any aircraft. Indeed, Student Pilots' solo time is permitted by regulation to be logged as PIC time. We weren't discussing solo for students, we were discussing instrument instruction during which a non instrument rated person is sole manipulating the controls. The rated pilot can log it and the non-rated student cannot, which is what I said from the first . If you're referring to pilots who hold an _Airmans_ _Certificate_ and are receiving instrument instruction from a CFII, indeed FAR 61.65(e)(1)(i) does permit logging PIC time when the pilot is sole manipulator of the controls of the aircraft in which he is rated. However, such a pilot is not a Student Pilot. Agreed. We don't disagree about the FAR's at all - not now or in any of our posts, as far as I can see. It's not entirely clear from Marty Ross' article whether he held a Student Pilot Certificate or Airmans Certificate during the time he accrued the actual instrument experience to which he was referring. Agreed, but regardless, my original statement was true. He can log it as PIC if he's rated in the aircraft and was sole manipulator of the controls. It appears, that implicit in your reply (indicating that instrument PIC time is loggable) I didn't say instrument PIC time was loggable. I said it was loggable under two conditions 1) rated, 2) sole manipulating controls. You said that wasn't true for students. I said it was. It was an extremely minor point. was the presumption that the student held an Airmans Certificate (otherwise he wouldn't be rated in the aircraft). As far as I know, a Student Pilot Certificate issued under 61.81 et seq. is an "Airman's Certificate," but that does not make the student rated in any aircraft. If he held any other certificate, he was not a Student Pilot. I chose to mention the regulations effective for students who do not hold an Airmans Certificate. You seem to have erroneously interpreted that as disagreeing with your statement, and failed to note that Student Pilots need not be "rated in the aircraft" to log PIC time. I never said, implied or believed that students can't log PIC time. We were engaged in discussing the conditions under which the sole manipulator of controls in actual IMC could log time. I simply said that it could be logged under the 61.51(e)(1) two conditions 1) rated, 2) sole manipulating controls, and referring to my comment you said "Of course, that's not true for student pilots." which I took minor umbrage to, since it's true of students as well as non-students. Of course there are other ways a student pilot can log PIC time, but my statement was and is true. Misunderstandings are common when ambiguities are not addressed, and articles are not thoroughly read and comprehended. True. I know it happens to me. I noticed. :-) Todd Pattist (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) ___ Make a commitment to learn something from every flight. Share what you learn. |
#7
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It's not entirely clear from Marty Ross' article whether he held a
Student Pilot Certificate or Airmans Certificate during the time he accrued the actual instrument experience to which he was referring. Here's what he said: I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. Indeed, I was discussing my instrument training, during which I held a PPSEL airman's certificate. I get the gist, however - I can log actual (IMC) time during my instrument training as PIC time. So now, my logbook correction is the other way around - I must add the actual time back into the PIC column where it was removed, rather than remove it where it was added; my instructor was inconsistent about this. Thanks! "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 10:19:39 -0400, Todd Pattist wrote in Message-Id: : Larry Dighera wrote: Were you sole manipulator of the controls and rated in the aircraft? If so, it's loggable 61.51(e) PIC time. Of course, that's not true for student pilots. Well, technically, it *is* true for student pilots. I would define a Student Pilot as one who holds a Student Pilot Certificate ONLY, no Airmans Certificate. (I'll use that definition throughout my reply.) A student who holds _only_ a Student Pilot Certificate can NOT log PIC time in actual instrument conditions, because FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i)* requires him to be the sole occupant of the aircraft to log PIC time. Can we can agree, that a competent CFI(I) would not permit a student pilot to solo in IMC (nor under a vision restricting device)? If a Student Pilot found himself in IMC while soloing, he might be able to log that actual instrument time as PIC time, but in all likelihood, posthumously. :-) You missed the "rated in the aircraft" part of my statement. Not really. I wasn't disagreeing with your statement. I was just attempting to provide additional, complementary information. It's true, because I said only pilots who were *both* "sole manipulator of the controls" *and* "rated in the aircraft" could log the time, and no student is "rated in the aircraft." When you state, "it's true," the antecedent of your use of the pronoun 'it' is ambagious. If you are referring to Student Pilots logging IMC PIC time, that is prohibited by regulation FAR 61.65(e)(4)(i), because they can't solo in IMC. I am not aware of a requirement for Student Pilots to be "rated in the aircraft" to be permitted to log PIC time. Indeed, Student Pilots' solo time is permitted by regulation to be logged as PIC time. If you're referring to pilots who hold an _Airmans_ _Certificate_ and are receiving instrument instruction from a CFII, indeed FAR 61.65(e)(1)(i) does permit logging PIC time when the pilot is sole manipulator of the controls of the aircraft in which he is rated. However, such a pilot is not a Student Pilot. It's not entirely clear from Marty Ross' article whether he held a Student Pilot Certificate or Airmans Certificate during the time he accrued the actual instrument experience to which he was referring. Here's what he said: I recently realized that I should not have included any "actual" (IMC) time recorded in my logbook as PIC time while I was an instrument student. While an Instrument Student training for an IFR rating must hold an Airmans Certificate, a Student Pilot does receive instrument instruction, but he can not log it as PIC time (unless he is solo). It appears, that implicit in your reply (indicating that instrument PIC time is loggable) was the presumption that the student held an Airmans Certificate (otherwise he wouldn't be rated in the aircraft). I chose to mention the regulations effective for students who do not hold an Airmans Certificate. You seem to have erroneously interpreted that as disagreeing with your statement, and failed to note that Student Pilots need not be "rated in the aircraft" to log PIC time. Misunderstandings are common when ambiguities are not addressed, and articles are not thoroughly read and comprehended. I know it happens to me. (Of course, this entire discussion is limited to Aircraft Category operations, and ignores Part 141 training.) * For convenient reference, here's a link to the regulations: http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...R.nsf/MainFram e?OpenFrameSet -- Irrational beliefs ultimately lead to irrational acts. -- Larry Dighera, |
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