RynoB said:What policies do most airlines have regarding flight instructing on days off?
Kingairer said:You probably wont want to do it anyways.
launchpad said:The FAA considers any flight time as an instructor as commercial pilot time. That time applies to any 8 hour rules, 30 in 7 rules, 1000 a year rules, etc. etc.
seagull said:Casey,
Said it here before, will say it again because it is important to understand this. Matters not one bit what your local FSDO thinks about the issue. Doesn't matter if they side with you AND put it in writing, with your region sending you another letter affirming it. There is only ONE opinion that matters, and that is FAA Chief Counsel, Washington D.C.
The airlines have some experience with this, and it has been tested, I believe. In any event, you can try not counting it as commercial flight time if you want, but lots of luck if FAA decides to file against you. They will also file against the airline, btw, as they are not allowed to schedule you in excess of the limits. So, the most probable scenario is that you get fired and violated. You can try fighting it to the NTSB, but they'll side with the Chief Counsel. Oh, and lest you think a letter you got from your FSDO or Region will help you in this, best think again. It will have less value than the toilet paper in the men's room at NTSB at that hearing.
Not trying to sound harsh, but this is a double "foot stomper" issue to survive in this biz.
desertdog71 said:If you need or want extra Cash, what is to stop you from teaching some ground school classes?
Who cares - it's the companies opinion in this case that matters. If they say I can't fly commercially anywhere else, including instruction (which they specifically mentioned) I'm not gonna do it.*casey said:thats not a view shared by every FSDO.
wheelsup said:Who cares - it's the companies opinion in this case that matters. If they say I can't fly commercially anywhere else, including instruction (which they specifically mentioned) I'm not gonna do it.*
Here's an idea - can you flight instruct without a commercial license? My CFI ticket says "valid only when accompanied by certificate #XXXX". Why would it say I can only flight instruct when I carry my commercial license, if it's not "commercial" flying? Just doesn't add up, IMO.
If you really need to make some extra money as a first year FO, don't spend your per diem.
And the last thing I want to do after a 4-day is get into another plane, and go where someone else wants to go.
casey said:not spending your per-diem though? i have to eat on my trips![]()