montanapilot
Well-Known Member
I was wondering if regionals allow their pilots to flight instruct on the side if they so chose to? Also would instructional time count towards the 100 hours a month/1000 hours a year rule for part 121?
121.489 Flight time limitations: Other commercial flying.
No pilot that is employed as a pilot by a certificate holder conducting flag operations may do any other commercial flying if that commercial flying plus his flying in air transportation will exceed any flight time limitation in this part.
since one can flight instruct with only a 3rd Class medical, would CFIing really be considered to be a commercial activity?
so if you could get company approval and do just a few hours a month, that would be ok?Check 121.489 it talks about other commercial flying. the e-cfrs seem to not be working at the moment so I cannot get the specific citation but you should find what you are looking for in there.
Seth
I have no idea but I think you have to get permission from your cheif pilot. I think that any flying you do, instructing or whatever as long as you are getting paid is part of your 1000 a year. EVEN if it is part 91 instructing.so if you could get company approval and do just a few hours a month, that would be ok?
I was wondering if regionals allow their pilots to flight instruct on the side if they so chose to? Also would instructional time count towards the 100 hours a month/1000 hours a year rule for part 121?
Back to the whole 'is providing flight instruction a commercial activity' thing.. I believe that you're being paid for your instruction, and you are not operating an airplane carrying passengers or cargo for compensation or hire. You also don't even need a medical (unless you have to act as PIC), so how can it be a commercial activity? That said, some people will argue that you have to have a commercial certificate to be a CFI, so it must be commercial activity.
When you are giving flight instruction, you are exercising your flight instructor certificate, not your commercial certificate. That is why you can instruct, and be paid for it, with a 3rd class medical.
CamYZ125 said:That said, some people will argue that you have to have a commercial certificate to be a CFI, so it must be commercial activity.
I will stop with student instruction but it continues on with other operations that you can do as a commercial pilot.
To me this seems like a bit of a grey area because in here it seems that they are implying that student instruction is a commercial operation..
Opinions?
Yep. The CFI time counts against your flight time limits for your airline job.
You can get approval, usually, from the airline with the caveat that if you time out and can't accept an airline trip...you're in trouble.
True. But my airline's policy is that no outside commercial flying can be done. But now we're back to square one, is it commercial flying?