H46Bubba said:
So... Say I got my instrument in April, I get my 6 approaches and a hold during the next 6 months. The six months ends October and I have to get current again during the next six months? That's how I originally thought it was and I interpereted from the FARs
Maybe. I'm not sure what you are saying.
As of the day you received your instrument rating, you were current for the next 6 calendar months. So, if you got your instrument in April, you could fly under IFR until October 31 without doing even one single logable approach or hold.
Whether you are current today, December 15, depends on when those 6 approaches and a hold took place.
Here's the problem. IFR currency is a "look back." You start with =today= and look to what you did during the previous 6 calendar months - that would be June 1.
So, from your example, let's say the 6 approaches you did in the 6 months after getting the ticket were one each in May, June, July, August, Sept, and Oct. None since. Sorry, you are =not= current today. If you look back 6 months from today, you only have 5 approaches in the past 6 calendar months. You lost currency at the end of November.
Once you are have lost currency, the FAA gives you another 6 calendar months to get current on your own - you still can't act as PIC on an IFR flight, but you can log the necessary approaches and holds under the hood or even in actual (if another pilot is acting as the pilot in command of the flight.
Once you have the date you lost currency, it's probably easier to count forward from that point. Since you lost currency at th end of November, you have until the end of May to regain it without an IPC.