Yeah, me too. I would like to see an official FAA Letter of Interpretation that says taxi time is flight time.
Just to put an end to this quibbling over .2 on the hobbs.
Of course. I don't think that would be the legal interpretation, since ALL the regulations concerning flight time definitions infer being in flight. I think the legal definition of "power for the purpose of flight" begins with the take-off roll. Applying power to taxi is for the purpose of positioning the airplane to prepare for take-off.
I think that is what a legal interpretation would be.
Does this count?
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org...0/interpretations/data/interps/2004/kania.rtf
Remember that the definition of "flight time" is not just about people logging time that you perosnally don't like them to. It implicates flight time duty issues for professional pilots as well.
You'll find similar "flight time equals block-to-block time" references in Chief Counsel opinions going back to at least 1979.
The overriding rule during checkrides with an examiner who is wrong is, "Yes sir. I didn't realize that. Thank your for explaining it to me."I would think you should be able to show up with that and tell the fsdo to pound sand, but in nicer terms. "Lets call OKC right now then." lol. I doubt the checkride would then go to well, but still.
The overriding rule during checkrides with an examiner who is wrong is, "Yes sir. I didn't realize that. Thank your for explaining it to me."
What I have to wonder is whether the company POIs oit of that FSDO are regularly allowing certificate holders to force employees to exceed mandatory flight time limitations or if it's "yes, but that definition only applies to Parts 91, 119, 121, 125, 135 but not Part 61."
Not true. Per 14 CFR Part 1, aircraft time in service is defined asOr exceed aircraft inspection times if companies are not logging that time on the airframes. It was not unusual to have over 30 minutes of taxi time at larger airports. You add that up on a daily basis and you're talking quite a bit of airframe time.
Time in service, with respect to maintenance time records, means the time from the moment an aircraft leaves the surface of the earth until it touches it at the next point of landing.
I go by the hobbs. if I pay I log.If the engine is running, then I'm counting it. The Hobbs and Tach run with the engine in operation soo..
Not true. Per 14 CFR Part 1, aircraft time in service is defined as
The FAA felt differently when they revoked their certificates.
I've gone back a couple of times through the posts, but I'm not sure I'm following everything here. I understand that there was a pilot(s) that got certs pulled for falsely reporting time. The part I'd like clarified is if you're saying that aircraft time has to be Block time as opposed to Flight time?
Do you know for a fact they were fired because of maintenance time discrepancies? Or was it the flight/duty issue that got them? Because I don't know that the part 1 definition of aircraft time in service could be more explicit or simple. Or, perhaps that airline had no other method of tracking time than block to block, and therefore that was what they used for mx time. Our airline uses an air pressure switch for the Hobbs meter to track airframe time, activates around 30 KIAS.The FAA felt differently when they revoked their certificates.
Do you know for a fact they were fired because of maintenance time discrepancies? Or was it the flight/duty issue that got them? Because I don't know that the part 1 definition of aircraft time in service could be more explicit or simple. Or, perhaps that airline had no other method of tracking time than block to block, and therefore that was what they used for mx time. Our airline uses an air pressure switch for the Hobbs meter to track airframe time, activates around 30 KIAS.
The point is that "flight time" =is= "block time" as the FAA has defined, interpreted and used it.
There are two issues. One is logging for certificates, ratings and currency. The other involves counting time toward the time limitations for various pilots - primarily flight time limitations for pilots in commercial operations.
If you're talking about logging time for certificate, ratings and currency, there nothing at all wrong with counting less time than you are entitled to. If you don't want to count the 0.2 or 0.3 for taxi as flight time, no problem at all. Heck if you want to skip logging for a month or to, no problem there either. The only problem comes when you log more time than you are entitled to.
But if you're talking about time limitations for pilots - take a look at 135.265 for example, we're talking about the most amount of time a pilot is permitted to fly in a day, week, month, year. In that case, counting less than the regulation requires is a potential problem. If you're only allowed to fly 8 hours and you log 8 hours but actually flew 9 hours based on the FAA "block to block" definition, you have possible violated two regs - the flight time limitations and 61.59 - falsifying records on something material.
For a fact because they falsified aircraft logbooks- the "can". There was no other means of tracking aircraft time other than this logbook (EMB-120).
I would have thought it was purely tach (and whatever the count for jets) time for maintenance purposes since that reflects overall wear on the engine. Not an issue I've had to look at, though.
Not true. Per 14 CFR Part 1, aircraft time in service is defined asTime in service, with respect to maintenance time records, means the time from the moment an aircraft leaves the surface of the earth until it touches it at the next point of landing.
The FAA felt differently when they revoked their certificates.
For a fact because they falsified aircraft logbooks- the "can". There was no other means of tracking aircraft time other than this logbook (EMB-120).
I would have thought so too, until I started studying for my IA test and found a question that referenced the 14 CFR part 1 definition of time in service for aircraft.I would have thought it was purely tach (and whatever the count for jets) time for maintenance purposes since that reflects overall wear on the engine. Not an issue I've had to look at, though.