SurferLucas
Southern Gentleman
This is VERY SIMPLE guys: Don't try and over think this!
If he's the person with his hands physically on the flight controls and the other guy is not...then he can log PIC because he's rated for the aircraft category/class (single engine land) and he is the sole manipulator of the flight controls. So he can log PIC and TT if he so chooses.
Because he is a CFI/CFII, he can log it all as ACTING PIC (You can after all be PIC without touching a damn thing)...because he can legally instruct the other pilot. Their log books would have to reflect it as such, but that is perfectly legal as well.
That of course assumes that he has endorsements for High Performance, Complex and High Altitude Operations.
As stated, if you're going to LOG PIC TIME AS AN INSTRUCTOR, YOU HAD BETTER BE READY TO ANSWER QUESTIONS SHOULD THEY ARISE IN AN INTERVIEW. Whatever you put in your logbook you are responsible for, so if I ask you to describe the stick shaker/puller test on the PC-12, I expect the full answer in detail.
If he's the person with his hands physically on the flight controls and the other guy is not...then he can log PIC because he's rated for the aircraft category/class (single engine land) and he is the sole manipulator of the flight controls. So he can log PIC and TT if he so chooses.
Because he is a CFI/CFII, he can log it all as ACTING PIC (You can after all be PIC without touching a damn thing)...because he can legally instruct the other pilot. Their log books would have to reflect it as such, but that is perfectly legal as well.
That of course assumes that he has endorsements for High Performance, Complex and High Altitude Operations.
As stated, if you're going to LOG PIC TIME AS AN INSTRUCTOR, YOU HAD BETTER BE READY TO ANSWER QUESTIONS SHOULD THEY ARISE IN AN INTERVIEW. Whatever you put in your logbook you are responsible for, so if I ask you to describe the stick shaker/puller test on the PC-12, I expect the full answer in detail.