So, what other regulations do you not follow because you don't like them? Sounds like a classic case of anti-authority to me
Huh? I don't log sole-manipulator PIC because I have a couple thousand hours of real, I-sign-the-logbook PIC. If you don't have enough Part 1 PIC to meet insurance mins, fine, do what you need, but my simple advice is to not group sole-manipulator PIC into Part 1 PIC. The way
SteveC does it sounds like a good idea.
But like it or not, if I show up at a Delta interview with 1000 hours of 767 PIC time because I'm a fully typed F/O, I
will be sent home. You can argue the log/act case with them if you'd like, but you would be sent home as well. Just the nature of it. Part 1 PIC is king.
Contrast that with a CFI who sits in the right seat with an experienced pilot, never touches a thing and is half asleep for most of the flight, and logs that as PIC dual given... yet somehow that's more legitimate in most people's minds?
Because as the CFI, you're responsible for the aircraft. At least when I was a CFI, if my student bent something, it was on me. YMMV with your operation, but the test for me is if metal gets bent, who is the FAA going to come after?
It's your logbook, by the way. Log what you want. I know the rules between sole-manipulator and Part 1 PIC, so I don't need convincing. I simply choose not to log sole-manipulator PIC because, like it or not, sole-manipulator PIC is generally frowned upon at competitive jobs.
Let's ask the peanut gallery (other fully-typed FOs):
Polar742 Derg Alchemy
Do you boys log sole-manipulator PIC, if you even keep a logbook?
