Sure. Why don't you find this guy a job to get him the 100 PIC hours.
Seems like he has that taken care of.
Or... You could just let someone pay you to get 100 more PIC.
A job x 100 hours = money in your pocket.
Or... You could just let someone pay you to get 100 more PIC.
A job x 100 hours = money in your pocket.
I understand it is completely within the FAA definition of Pilot in Command to log PIC while also logging dual time. I just have in all ways been under the impression (as well as told by few people who conduct interviews for airlines) that many companies will not honor that as PIC time during an interview. They wanted to see PIC time while you were the final authority of the aircraft. I have always offered to log PIC in my own students log book if they so choose but I usually tell the aforementioned story. Personal choice i guess. To each his own.
you are not the final authority if you are a student with an instructor on board. if really goes down, who really has the final say? the reason you hear this at UND is because the instructor is employed by the university, not an independant contractor. If a CFI at UND gave a student final authority, they would get fired pretty quick. it is common sense that if you are receiving instruction, you have less experience in that type of flying, therefore, you are not the final authority.
:rotfl:interviewers like common sense, not people looking for loopholes.
you are not the final authority if you are a student with an instructor on board. if really goes down, who really has the final say? the reason you hear this at UND is because the instructor is employed by the university, not an independant contractor. If a CFI at UND gave a student final authority, they would get fired pretty quick. it is common sense that if you are receiving instruction, you have less experience in that type of flying, therefore, you are not the final authority. interviewers like common sense, not people looking for loopholes.
you are not the final authority if you are a student with an instructor on board. if really goes down, who really has the final say? the reason you hear this at UND is because the instructor is employed by the university, not an independant contractor. If a CFI at UND gave a student final authority, they would get fired pretty quick. it is common sense that if you are receiving instruction, you have less experience in that type of flying, therefore, you are not the final authority. interviewers like common sense, not people looking for loopholes.
I don't think any of this makes sense. What does being employed by UND have to do with anything? UND doesn't make the rules on what you are permitted to log, the FAA does. As far as I know, an FAR isn't a loophole.. :dunno:
This.following FAR definitions of loggable time is not a loophole.
What about going back through your logbook and fixing errors that were made in addition, or maybe you did a multi engine flight and forgot to put an entry under the multi engine category. Its your time and your logbook, you can put what ever you want in there. You just have to be able to justify it. Its not falsifying if you flew the airplane.i know you can do it. i have done it a few times myself, i have done it a few times for my students; but at the end of the day, the extra 100-150 PIC won't make a difference. the difference in my book looks like around 200hrs, i don't really care.
going back in your logbook and adding all the PIC time when it was not logged that way would be falsifying your logbook IMHO.
i know you can do it. i have done it a few times myself, i have done it a few times for my students; but at the end of the day, the extra 100-150 PIC won't make a difference. the difference in my book looks like around 200hrs, i don't really care.
going back in your logbook and adding all the PIC time when it was not logged that way would be falsifying your logbook IMHO.
What about going back through your logbook and fixing errors that were made in addition, or maybe you did a multi engine flight and forgot to put an entry under the multi engine category. Its your time and your logbook, you can put what ever you want in there. You just have to be able to justify it. Its not falsifying if you flew the airplane.
i view it is falsifying because the instructor logged it, not me. it is one thing to fix a legit mistake in addition, etc, but to go back thru and put in all PIC time for every lesson you flew? what if the instructor took controls on 323 lesson 65 1 time, and you put in all the pic time for the lesson, well you weren't really pic for the entire length of the lesson.Correcting an error is falsifying your logbook?!?! Man. If the FAA ever saw my logbook they'd throw me under the jail then.
Strike through the error (if there's something written there), initial it, and correct it. No problem.
If I forgot to log the time under a certain column that it could legally go under, it's correcting an error not falsifying. Falsifying is putting in time I didn't fly.