meritflyer
Well-Known Member
I heard that you are able to log "actual" instrument time if you were flying at night with no visual references or horizon (example, over a non-populated area with no lights like the desert?).
True?
True?
meritflyer said:I heard that you are able to log "actual" instrument time if you were flying at night with no visual references or horizon (example, over a non-populated area with no lights like the desert?).
True?
meritflyer said:I heard that you are able to log "actual" instrument time if you were flying at night with no visual references or horizon (example, over a non-populated area with no lights like the desert?).
True?
But "IMC" does not mean "actual." If you are flying at 10,500 msl 900' below a overcast cloud deck with CAVU below, you are in IMC, but you are definitely =not= in "actual." "Actual" exists when conditions outside the airplane make it necessary to use the instruments to keep the shiny side up.ChinookDriver said:Well, here's what the Instrument Flying Handbook tells us:
IMC: Meteorological conditions expressed in terms of visibility, distance from cloud, and ceiling less than the minimums prescribed for VMC, requiring operations to be conducted under IFR.
ColMustard said:Probably won't find this scenario too often,
-ColM
I've had discussions before about logging actual instruments at night and the question came up what about when you are in the clouds AT night. Do you log both or one or the other?
VFR but actual. As Chinook pointed out "IFR" and "VFR" is a matter of specifically-defined cloud clearances and abstract visibility, and change significantly with the airspace you are flying in (for example, by definition, it's never VFR in Class A airspace even if it clear and visibility >100 miles; on the other hand, in Class B 3 miles of visibility with the top of your vertical tail in the cloud deck above is VFR). "Actual" is more practically defined as the ability to keep the airplane upright. The two sets of terms have very little to do with each other.Windchill said:Curiosity on the impact of legal aspects ... if one is over the moon-less desert at night, finding themselves needing to fly "soley by reference to instruments," would that be illegal if they don't have a safety pilot and do not have the IR to fly solely by reference to instruments? Or does it fall under a wierd "VFR-but-actual" sort of condition? :insane:
MidlifeFlyer said:VFR but actual. As Chinook pointed out "IFR" and "VFR" is a matter of specifically-defined cloud clearances and abstract visibility, and change significantly with the airspace you are flying in (for example, by definition, it's never VFR in Class A airspace even if it clear and visibility >100 miles; on the other hand, in Class B 3 miles of visibility with the top of your vertical tail in the cloud deck above is VFR). "Actual" is more practically defined as the ability to keep the airplane upright. The two sets of terms have very little to do with each other.
mastermags said:So technically, a non-instrument rated pilot can log actual here without a safety pilot in VFR conditions? This seems to violate the "see-and-avoid" concept of VFR flying.
Why? A safety pilot is required for simulated IFR conditions. Going back to the FAA Legal opinion I quoted earlier, that meansmastermags said:So technically, a non-instrument rated pilot can log actual here without a safety pilot in VFR conditions? This seems to violate the "see-and-avoid" concept of VFR flying.
Who says you are in IMC?I doubt that is going to fly.....If you get called on the carpet by the FAA or someone else, how are you going to explain flying in "IMC" without an instrument ticket.
meritflyer said:According to a DE it is (who is also a B767 Capt)