My total time is 5700 if you removed dual-received time (piston stuff from 20 years ago, C-152 lessons, IFR lessons, etc). My total time is 5900 if you
include dual received. Unless I did something wrong, the only way to "capture" Dual Received into Pilot credentials is to call it SIC time. Pilot Credentials does NOT have a Dual Received category/column. I may be on my own mini-OCD path of answering my own question, as the dual received hours obviously did physically in fact occur.
My PIC time (of which is 2,500 PIC multi-engine turboprop) is not affected at all.
My question does not pertain to PIC and dual received. I am clear on the fact that for airline application purposes, you cannot be PIC during dual received time. It pertains to the fact that in my Log Ten Pro (just delete it out ?) my Dual Received is logged into Dual Recevied,
AND into the SIC column, to allow Pilot Credentials to "capture" the hours into the SIC column when I do the export.
Also, observe that when acting as Flight Instructor, it is accepted practice to log both Instructor AND PIC. My belief is it is equally valid, for airline applications, when receiving instruction, log BOTH Dual Received and SIC
Basically, my total time is calculated as below
Pilot Credentials: PIC + SIC which includes dual received as SIC = TT. This figure is 200 hours higher than Log Ten Pro version of TT. I printed Log Ten Pro into a nice physical logbook but under the "Total Time" column it is 200 hour short than Pilot Credentials. So at "logbook review time" I am concerned they may say WTF over. I can easily place a note or a letter explaining this fact in my logbook, but just wondering if anyone had a similar scenario or additional feedback.
Note that AA themselves states that for their application, dual received is to be considered SIC. See attachment.
your TT is the same, regardless. Depending on where you are looking, they care about PIC, SIC and not other specific flight hour types. Can you not change it at this point, i.e. already published and sent a fix it letter? To be clear, is it summing a (for example) 1.5 hr flight that you were legally PIC for as a PP, as 1.5 PIC and 1.5 dual now as SIC, which is artificially logging a 3.0 for a 1.5 flight? Is that the situation?