Right seat is PIC through declaration prior to commencing flight operations. Left seat is PIC through ‘sole manipulation of the flight controls’.
Nope. Only one person =is= PIC at a time. More than one person might be able to =log= PIC at a time, but only one person =is= PIC.Right seat is PIC through declaration prior to commencing flight operations. Left seat is PIC through ‘sole manipulation of the flight controls’.
So you're saying that if you are flying 400' below a cloud deck with 100 miles visibility ("IMC") and put on a hood, the rules don't require a safety pilot until you get 501' below the deck? Or are you saying that it's illegal to put on a hood until you get 501' below the clouds?While being a safety pilot will work…it only works if in VFR conditions. The second you enter IMC a safety pilot is nothing more than a passenger.
Does this help?I was curious as to the way many of you log your time after a safety pilot flight. I've heard many different ways people log them, and I've also heard of reason's why they're wrong.
I never logged any safety pilot time before, but now I'm feeling the pressures time building, and I regret it. I know people who log it all PIC; however I once had a DE tell me you only log PIC if you take the controls to prevent an accident, otherwise you log SIC.
So you're saying that if you are flying 400' below a cloud deck with 100 miles visibility ("IMC") and put on a hood, the rules don't require a safety pilot until you get 501' below the deck? Or are you saying that it's illegal to put on a hood until you get 501' below the clouds?
Or, are you saying that, if you are in a scattered to broken cloud layer but with a 900' ceiling and want to practice the ILS to minimums at an airport, so you decide to keep the hood on all the time, no safety pilot is required? Or that you're not allowed to put a hood on in those conditions?
While being a safety pilot will work…it only works if in VFR conditions. The second you enter IMC a safety pilot is nothing more than a passenger.
I agree with you on the result, but I may or may not agree on the the reasoning. Let's see...I filed the IFR plan, since I am the only one able to do so, so I am the acting PIC for the entire flight. He is under the hood, so I am required when VFR and also when we go IMC because he could not legally be there without my filing of the flight plan and being the acting PIC. He is the sole manipulator of the controls for the entire flight, both in and out of IMC, so again we can both log the entire time as PIC. I dont see anything in the regs that says a PPL can not log PIC in IMC, afterall, we all do it when we are out with our CFII's.
That is my take on it. I would like to hear others views on this though and please provide reasoning based on the FAR's. I am thinking purely regulatory, not if it will be a questioned practice during an interview.
Why would you add something incorrect?Should also add that the safety pilot need not be current medically unless the safety pilot is acting as PIC.
I've always logged it PIC.
How I count the time, Since you shouldn't really be putting foggles on until you're 400ft AGL or so, I count all the time in VMC above 400ft AGL (assuming they wear foggles the whole time). Because of the little amount of time needed to fly 400ft on climb or descent, the little hobbs time is usually what i log where as the flying pilot gets the big hobbs. At any moment we were to enter actual IMC, I am no longer a safety pilot and as such I don't get to log that time.
Big hobbs: 6.3
Little hobbs: 6.0
Actual .5
I log 5.5 hours PIC if I'm Safety pilot.
Misspoke, meant that a safety pilot need not be current in the aircraft unless that safety pilot is acting as pilot in command..... sorryWhy would you add something incorrect?
A safety pilot is a required crewmember 91.109(b)
A required crewmember requires a current medical. 61.3(c)
So you fly somewhere for 2.0 while sitting right seat and guy in left is wearing foggles.
You'd log.
Total: 2.0
PIC:1.8 (or however long he had the foggles on)
Day/night: 1.8
XC: 1.8
Left seat would log:
Total: 2.0
PIC: 2.0
Simulated: 1.8
XC 2.0
plus landing at destination
Yes. I forgot to to clarify both are IFR rated. That's how i've done all my time building flights was with another instrument rated pilot so I forgot there were other situations that arise lol. Nothing is black and white.I assume that if you are going IMC, you are IFR rated. If the other pilot is not, you are a required crew member, being that you are the only person capable of filing an IFR plan. You are then the acting PIC the entire flight and should log it as such. The pilot flying, can also log the entire flight as PIC since they are the sole manipulator of the controls, even thought they are not the acting PIC. You are giving away .8 PIC time, which by itself is not much. but if done over a few flights, when building towards a Comm rating could will end up costing you more time and money.
If however, you both are IFR rated and you are correct, once you enter IMC you are no longer required so should only log SIC.
Maybe not the cross country. The orphaned Part 61 FAQ took the position that a safety pilot may not log cross country time. I do not know whether or not that still represents FAA policy.Day/night: 1.8
XC: 1.8