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Are you ready for a logging extravaganza that we'll have you check in your log

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book for accuracy while learning how to really understand the regs around logging.

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Then you're going to love today's episode of the student pilot cast.

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Logging for mere mortals.

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Welcome back SPC listeners.

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I'm pumped to be back with a special episode of the student pilot cast during

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one of our recent recording sessions for beyond the check ride segment.

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Kent.

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And I realize that we had done one that went way beyond an hour.

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As we dove into a bunch of areas of logging.

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Clearly.

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We could have broken that topic up into smaller bite sized pieces.

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But because we're either lazy, too busy, or we just love talking about flying, even

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when it's mostly about the regulations we decided to just let it ride.

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Now I did manage to edit it down to just over an hour, but that's still too long.

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To have it as just a segment.

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So we'll forgo the training flight today.

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To get this valuable information out.

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Hope you enjoy it.

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And also that you get some good information out of it.

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We've already discussed some limitations that we didn't know about

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in ForeFlight since we recorded this.

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We cover briefly how to do some of the logging and how you can do some

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of it in ForeFlight it wasn't mostly about ForeFlight it's mostly about, you

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know, how you logged no matter how you do it, but we did mention ForeFlight

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and showed ForeFlight a little bit.

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If you're looking at the video version of this, so.

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See, if you can run across anything like that.

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And let us know about it.

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And we may do a follow-up to talk about that as well.

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Even better though.

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What did we forget?

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Or what did we get wrong?

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In this beyond the checkride segment.

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Uh, reach out to us via email@billatstudentpilotcast.com or you

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can use the contact form on the website if you prefer, but reach out to us and

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let us know your, take your stories or anything that you think we may have

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gotten wrong or should have said better.

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By the way.

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The video version of this segment is already published on YouTube.

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Uh, published it a little bit earlier.

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Today.

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And you might want to go check that out in this case because

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Kent will be sharing some visuals.

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To help go through the regs as, as well as some of the interpretations and as

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well as using ForeFlight a little bit, like I said, so the video version of

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this could actually prove pretty helpful.

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You can go to our YouTube channel to.

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Find it it's at youtube.com/at student pilot cast.

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Or you can just search for student pilot cast or student

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pilot cast logging on YouTube.

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There'll also be a link in the show notes.

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So lots of ways to find the videos.

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So don't forget to go check it out.

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While you're there.

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Why don't you hit subscribe on our tiny fledgling YouTube channel as well.

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So, thanks for always listening and thanks for watching.

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And enjoy.

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So let's get right to it beyond the checkride.

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Logging flight time explained.

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All right.

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Welcome back everybody to another segment of beyond the check ride.

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I'm here again, as usual with Ken Shook.

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How you doing Kent?

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Excellent.

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Good.

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always a good day when I can talk about flying.

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Always is always is.

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So I know I introduced these segments, a few episodes ago, and we're

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going to continue to release those.

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As I said, as segments within the student pilot cast, but I wanted to make a comment

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on it today, just to kind of set the stage a little more for, you know, what

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these are all about, we certainly don't want to give the impression that these

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are, you know, sort of the gospel truth about how you do any of these things

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and they're certainly not comprehensive.

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In what we're covering, we're mostly wanting to bring these topics up because,

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uh, especially Kent and a little bit me, we've had some experience in aviation and,

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we've found some things that we've learned over time that certainly aren't in.

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The ACS or what used to be the PTS and they don't, they aren't required knowledge

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to get a certificate or a rating or, you know, things like that, but they

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are practically important knowledge.

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And these are things that we've learned since our check rides.

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And, we're kind of trying to bring up that question and

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disseminate the information so that.

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We can start a discussion in the overall community about these things.

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And so we always want to hear feedback.

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I know that we've harped on that quite a bit.

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We always want to get feedback from you.

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We want to hear stories about how you've learned things

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beyond your own check rides.

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And this is really to open up the conversation.

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We're going to talk about our experiences, our stories.

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the things that we've run into and so on, and we want everyone

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to add to that conversation.

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Anything to add to that, Kent?

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I just wanted to make sure we were setting the stage.

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Yeah, that sounds great.

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And, you know, I hope that eventually we'll have enough feedback that we can

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even have a, a segment within a segment where we go through feedback every time

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and, and talk about it a little more.

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Like I said, I like to talk about flying, so just a, another way to do

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it and to expand the size of our little circle around the fire at the hangar.

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Right.

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That's right.

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That's right.

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Cool.

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So with that being said, what topic have you got for us today?

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Well, this time, kind of the overarching thing will be the, uh, regulations.

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and within that we're going to look at one that I have seen so

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many online arguments and confusion about, and that is logging time.

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I'm, I'm sure you've seen an argument or two over that in your day.

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Oh, for sure.

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So, you know, over the years I've, I've actually gotten to the point where

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The regulations actually make sense to me, don't tell the FAA or they'll

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probably revoke my medical for being crazy or something like that, but, um,

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There's gotta be something wrong with you, right?

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yes, yes, and one of the people that I, I learned a lot from was a guy by the name

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of Ron Levy, who, uh, was a participant in many of those arguments ages ago, But

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he actually taught a class at a college.

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I can't remember where it was, but, he was out in Maryland.

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So somewhere out in that vicinity, he was, uh, a guy who taught a college class in

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aviation law, so knew what he was talking about, always backed up his statements.

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And then by following all the references that he provided, I

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learned a lot about it myself.

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So, I've learned from those online discussions that I've had quite a bit.

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really it's all about going and finding references for your position.

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And, so sometimes I will learn that I was right and sometimes

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I'll learn that I was wrong.

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And, um,

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It's all still learning, right?

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exactly.

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So what are some of the big, the big issues that, I mean, the obvious one is,

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you know, logging PIC when you're doing instrument practice, but we'll get it.

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We'll hold off on that one for a second.

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Hopefully, are there any other big logging issues that you run into?

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Well, there's a couple.

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There is the can more than one person log PIC at the same time, or even

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log the time at all at the same time.

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The other one is Okay, I'm going up with an instructor, and I'm

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getting my complex endorsement.

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How do I log that?

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So I

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Right?

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Right?

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Can you, can you log PIC when you don't have, a high performance

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endorsement, for example, or.

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Sure.

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Something along those lines in a high performance.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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Good question.

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I think I know the answer to that

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actually,

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the, the first thing here is, don't try to make it make sense.

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If you try to make it make sense, right off the bat, you'll say, what on earth

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is going on, and it won't make any sense.

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So,

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federal regulations after

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yes, yes, if you sit back and wait until the end, hopefully by the time we're

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done tonight, then it will make sense.

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so the, I mean, the first.

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thing to understand is that to the FAA, logging PIC Being the PIC

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are completely separate things.

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when I say being the PIC, we'll also use the term acting as the PIC.

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That doesn't mean acting like you're not really a acting PIC as the

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person who is being or acting as the pilot in command of the aircraft.

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There is always one and only one pilot in command of an aircraft, period.

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End of story.

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However, there are times when you can have, I'll put an asterisk

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on the first one here, but zero up to three people logging PIC.

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So, Don't let me forget that.

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We'll, uh, we'll cover what those are here at the end, and

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it'll make a little more sense.

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so first thing, let's talk about how you can look this stuff up on your own.

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And in fact, I will see if I could share my screen here.

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All right.

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So here in my browser window, you'll see, we have gone to ecfr.

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gov.

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So electronic code of federal regulations.

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And what we're looking for here is title 14 aeronautics and space.

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So let's click on that.

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And this is an awful lot of stuff because this is everything dealing with the

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FAA and NASA and all kinds of things.

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So.

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Pretty much everything that you're going to want in terms of aviation

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regulations is going to be in this first chapter here, Chapter 1.

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So I'll expand that.

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And for logging stuff, One of the things that you should have learned right away

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as a student pilot is that anything that depends on who the pilot is, is 61.

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And then general operating rules are Part 91, so.

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Let's go to Subchapter D here, where Part 61 is.

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Now, there's a difference between whether you click on

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Part 61 or the title over here.

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So if you click on the left, you'll get the Table of Contents.

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If you click on the right, you'll get the entire part.

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And that is generally what I do, so let's go ahead and do that.

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So here we go.

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This is part 61.

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Everything in part 61.

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Now, I happen to know that it's 6151 is what we're looking for.

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But, you can also just do a quick find for logging.

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So, you can see C, D, and E there.

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I'm going to scroll back up.

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So, there we go.

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6151, Pilot Logbooks.

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So which questions shall we address first here?

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well, let's do the scenario where let's say you just got your private

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pilot certificate and you want to add on something like a complex

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or high performance endorsement.

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Yep.

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That's a good one.

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Good, simple one.

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now this is all, we're talking PIC right now.

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So 6151E is where we talk about PIC.

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So logging pilot and command flight time.

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A sport, recreational, private, commercial or airline transport pilot may log

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pilot in command time for flights.

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And this is the one that really matters here right off the bat, except

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when logging flight time under 61 1 59 C, when the pilot is the sole

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manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the pilot is rated

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or has sport pilot privileges for that category and class of aircraft if the

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aircraft class rating is appropriate.

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So.

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That's a mouthful.

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let's pick that apart.

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So, except when logging flight time under 61159C.

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I happen to know that that is all about the, what's called a second in command

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professional development program.

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So, that's something that Part 135 operators can use, if

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they have the op spec for it.

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and it, changes things a little bit.

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So if you're part of one of those SIC PDPs, kind of skip everything we're

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going to tell you because the SIC PDP takes precedence over basically

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all of the other logging rules.

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Now, if you don't already know that, well, what do you need to do?

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You need to go and look at what 61159C says.

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So let's go ahead and click on that and do that.

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And you can see when you click on it, this website highlights the section.

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A commercial pilot may log second in command pilot time toward the aeronautical

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experience requirements of paragraph A of this section, blah, blah, blah.

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Employed by a part one 19 certificate holder.

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Authorized to conduct operations under part 135 of this chapter,

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et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.

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So none of that is applicable to the scenario that we're in here.

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So, you don't need to read.

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These little subsections at all.

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this just simply isn't applicable.

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so that whole exception that you read in a 6151E, it just doesn't

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pertain to our scenario anymore.

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They're not, uh, they're not in one of those.

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programs.

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exactly.

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So now I need to find it again.

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Okay.

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So here we are.

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6151 E.

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So this exception here.

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does not apply.

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Now let's pick apart the rest of this.

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There's this or, or has sport pilot privileges, blah, blah, blah.

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We're talking about somebody who just got their private pilot certificate.

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So that means this whole section is irrelevant as well.

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Yep.

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Skip on

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So what that means is that effectively our person who is just a private pilot,

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you know, they're, they're working on some flight training all under part 91.

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So, When the pilot is the sole manipulator of the controls of an

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aircraft for which the pilot is rated.

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Uh, Oh, what does that mean?

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Here's something that you'll find throughout the regulations.

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They don't leave a whole lot of ambiguity in the regulations.

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So let's Let's see if we can find out, what does rated mean?

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And where we find that is you can always kind of peel the onion on this stuff.

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So, definitions relative to part 61.

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only are always going to be up in 61.

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1.

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So if we scroll way back up to the top, it actually isn't completely

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at the top because there are a couple of special federal aviation

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regulations up here, but here we go.

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Applicability and definitions.

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That's what you'll find at in the 0.

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1 of pretty much every part.

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So what we want to look up here is look up rated or rating.

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It's not here, right?

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So next, let's peel the onion.

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Let's go out to Subchapter D, Airmen.

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Well, nothing really there, because the first part in Subchapter D is this

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flight simulation training device, etc.

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That's not really applicable.

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So, peel the onion again.

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And you know, I must have clicked on something there that I didn't

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really mean to because this is what I wanted to be able to see.

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We're going to back all the way out to Part 1.

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Definitions and Abbreviations.

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And this is applicable to all of the regulations.

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So now let's go down We're looking for rated or rating now.

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Let me, okay, public aircraft, you can see some of this is OEI power.

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Yeah, a lot of, a lot of this stuff is just stuff that is.

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Probably in the certification regulations, but right here rating means a statement

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that is part of a certificate sets forth special conditions privileges or

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limitations so Rating in the context of are you rated for an aircraft?

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means something that is part of a certificate your pilot certificate When

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you get your complex endorsement, is it printed on your pilot certificate?

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Nope, and it's it's kind of you know, they give it away in the naming

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of You know complex endorsement.

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Yeah.

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It's an endorsement.

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It's not a rating

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yep.

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So the things that get printed on your pilot certificate like Airplane

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Single Engine Land or Instrument Airplane, those are ratings and

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the endorsements are not ratings.

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So, now that we've figured out what the rating part means, let's

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jump back here into Part 61.

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Gonna have to scroll down again.

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Okay, so the way we read this now is, we can pretty much start right here.

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Logging in pilot in command flight time.

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A, we're going to skip over the stuff that's irrelevant.

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Private pilot may log pilot in command flight time for flights when the pilot is

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the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the pilot is rated.

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Now, is any of this other stuff even relevant at this point?

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Here's how we check that.

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So, you can see we've got these little i's, uh, you know, basically

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small roman numerals here,

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and at the end of every one we've got a semicolon, except for,

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before this last one, number four, Look at this word right here.

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It's an OR.

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As long as that is an OR, that means you only have to satisfy

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one of those sub conditions.

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So that's it.

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We've told the story now.

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We are able to log that flight time.

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So hopefully that, uh, that makes sense.

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Yeah, for sure.

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I will tell you there's another thing that you can look up and

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this is my don't argue with me I've been arguing about this subject

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for way longer than a lot of people

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But this is this is also something that is a really good reference So

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it's not at an easy URL like ecfr.

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gov.

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So I always just Google search for search FAA chief counsel not counsel like a

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group of leaders but counsel as in lawyers C O U N S E L Interpretations, and you

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can see it was actually, it was coming up before I even finished there, but,

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okay.

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So, interpretation search.

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Now what we can do is we can put in a keyword, and you can type in something

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like PIC or log or, you know, the problem is you'll get a lot of results on those.

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So one thing that's easy to search for is just search for the

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regulation that you're looking for.

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So let's do 6151E

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and that got it down to two pages.

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So, uh, oh no, two results.

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Now this one, the Herman interpretation, was actually requested by a

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friend of mine, Jason Herman.

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In fact, he was on an episode of the pilot cast quite a while ago.

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I

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So, Hey, Jason, if you're listening out there, hope you're doing well.

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what you'll see is you'll see these letters that are written from the

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FAA to the people who request these interpretations and anybody can do that.

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So, it says he requested clarification concerning the logging of pilot in

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command flight time under 14 CFR 6151E for flights conducted in complex

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and or high performance airplanes.

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Sounds like the question that we were just looking at, right?

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Your letter presents a scenario in which a pilot who holds a private pilot

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certificate with an aircraft single engine land rating but does not have

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endorsements for high performance or complex airplanes required by

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14 CFR 6131ENF to act as a PIC.

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Note the word act again that we talked about earlier is flying in a high

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performance and complex airplane.

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Another pilot who has those endorsements is acting as the PIC for the flight.

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Your letter asks whether the pilot lacking the endorsements may log PIC

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time for the time that the pilot is the sole manipulator of the controls.

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Does that wording sound familiar?

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Yes, it does.

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Your letter also asks a similar question in the context of a pilot

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lacking these endorsements logging PIC time during a training flight.

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The response that follows applies to either scenario because the regulations

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that govern the logging of PIC time whenever a pilot is the sole manipulator

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of the controls of an aircraft.

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So, whether you are getting instruction or just flying around with a friend.

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Doesn't matter.

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Yep.

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So section 50, 6151E governs the logging of PIC time and states and relevant park

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that a sport recreational blah blah blah.

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I'm not going to reread the whole, the whole thing there, but it does

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say right here, the term rated as used in section 6151E refers to the pilot

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holding the appropriate aircraft ratings.

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Category, class, and type, if a type rating is required, and these

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ratings are listed in 615 and placed on the pilot certificate.

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And then it references another interpretation, 6131 ENF established

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additional training and endorsement requirements before acting.

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As PIC of a complex or high performance airplane, respectively.

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Although these endorsements are required before a pilot may act as PIC, they are

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not required to log PIC time if the pilot is rated for and is the sole manipulator

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of the controls of the aircraft.

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So you're hearing a lot of those same words again.

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You know, they're, they're being very clear about, you know, rated and sole

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manipulator and all that kind of stuff.

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But here's where the whole don't ask it to make sense thing comes in and the

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difference between logging and acting.

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There is a distinction between logging PIC time and acting as a PIC.

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For a pilot to log PIC time, i.

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e.

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sole manipulator of the controls, a pilot must be properly rated in the

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aircraft by having the appropriate category, class, and type ratings.

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For a pilot to Act as a PIC, i.

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e.

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the pilot who has final authority and responsibility for the operation and

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safety of flight, and you'll hear those words in, uh, 61 3 and, a bunch of

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other places in the regulations as well.

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Pilot must be properly rated in the aircraft and be properly rated and

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authorized to conduct the flight.

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So,

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in your example, being properly rated and authorized would

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include having the endorsements for complex and high performance

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airplanes as required by 6131 ENF.

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Accordingly, in your examples, the pilot may log PIC time if that pilot

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is properly rated for the aircraft even though that pilot does not have the

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required endorsements to act as a PIC.

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So, basically, that's the letter from the FAA that says all that stuff

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that I just said before is true.

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Yep.

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Yep, exactly.

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I

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So, when you do have a question about stuff like that, it's, it's really a

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good idea to go and search those FAA interpretations because, uh, There are

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certain times where something isn't necessarily clear to a layman, and it's

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always good to see what the lawyers at the FAA have determined is, you know,

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the real meaning of the regulation.

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Yep.

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Yep.

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I actually have a quick story where this is very relevant.

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A few weeks ago, a friend of ours, took us on a flight in his great little arrow

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that he owns with a few other people.

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we went up for breakfast one Saturday morning for, up to the high country and

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Payson and Merrick, My middle son, who is a private pilot working on some of his

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other ratings, he does not have a complex endorsement and an arrow is a complex

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airplane, but he flew for, you know, 0.

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5 or 0.

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6, because our friend, allowed him to, you know, fly the airplane and get

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a feel for it on our way back down.

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And, when we got back, I said, you know, you can.

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You can log that 0.

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5 or 0.

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6, however long you were.

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So a manipulator of the controls and, he goes, yeah, but I don't have it.

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And I explained this to him, so that, you know, he, he was able to log that time

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because he is time building right now.

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He is trying to gain experience and get time.

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So.

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The interesting thing about that is technically that is a, so

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I've got a follow up question for you based on that scenario.

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I told you I was going to throw some curveballs at you.

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So, even though that that airport was more than 50 miles away, can he now log

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that as cross country time, even though he did not do the takeoff and landing?

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So you're wondering what he can log,

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He can log PIC,

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but can he log it as PIC cross country?

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And that took a little digging for us to figure out.

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Yep.

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So Now, I believe, let me go back to the interpretation search here, and

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I don't know why, but I know all the people who ask these dumb questions.

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They aren't actually dumb questions.

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I'll, I'll say that, but, okay, Van Zanen.

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Alright, so, you know, one thing I'm going to do first is go back to

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our definitions here at the top of part 61.

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because that should give us a clue what this interpretation is going to say.

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So what is the definition of cross country?

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Let me ask you that, Bill.

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What's the definition of cross country?

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Well, it, it, it depends on why you're logging it.

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So that's the important thing is if you're logging it for experience

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requirements to obtain other ratings, then there are definitions, based on

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that, if you're logging it, because you want a record of your flying, then

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that's a different standard, right?

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And that really means going from one place to another.

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Anywhere that would be a cross country.

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But if you want to use it for, for example, experience requirements for

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getting an instrument rating or for getting a commercial certificate, then

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it has to meet certain requirements.

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And the standard requirements for cross country for most of those

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certificates, has a definition.

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yes.

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Now, let me show you what the basic definition is here.

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Cross country time means, except as provided in paragraphs two through

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five, or two through six, rather,

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Time acquired during flight conducted by a person who holds a pilot certificate

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in an aircraft that includes landing at a point other than the point of departure

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and that involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage, electronic navigation

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aids, radio aids, or other navigation systems to navigate to the landing point.

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So.

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No mileage requirements, no, you know, specific requirements, but there is

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we'll pause there.

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So the, the two through six, if we look at those two is for the purpose

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of meeting aeronautical experience requirements, except for rotorcraft

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for a private pilot certificate.

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And then you'll see, here's the 50 nautical mile requirement

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that people are talking about.

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for a sport pilot.

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I did want it to go back to, what you read as the basic definition.

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it it does say landing,

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Yes.

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Landing at the airport.

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And so as soon

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is the key.

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yep, as soon as we got to that point, then it was clear that my son could

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not log that as PIC cross country time.

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Because it wasn't even, he didn't even perform a cross country flight

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because he was missing a key element.

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And that's the landing at a place that was different than the part of

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departure than the point of departure.

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I should, I should

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say,

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Exactly.

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but then those other criteria come into play.

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But in this case, they're irrelevant because he's already

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been disqualified from being able to

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Right.

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And yeah, these are basically for all the different types of pilot certificate.

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Now, I have a suggestion.

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This has no legal basis whatsoever.

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It's just, making it easier for people.

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So, If you want to, you can certainly mark down any flight where the takeoff and

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landing are at different places as cross country right from the very beginning.

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However, when you're working on your Private pilot certificate, your instrument

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rating, and your commercial, those all have the 50 nautical mile requirement.

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And you're going to have to total up the greater than 50 nautical

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mile cross country for filling out your, forms that you fill out to

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apply for the new pilot certificate

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Oh

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for the checkride.

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Used to be form 8710 when it was on paper, but Yeah, whatever

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the electronic equivalent is.

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IACRA, I

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think.

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IACRA

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Um, so, yeah, to make it easy to fill out your IACRA, don't bother

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logging the shorter stuff early

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on.

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It's just gonna make your calculations more difficult.

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yeah.

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So, I think generally after the commercial, as long as you have

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that landing elsewhere, you're good.

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so if we scroll down here just a little ways,

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number six here.

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For the ATP certificate, it's straight line distance, more than 50 nautical miles

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from the original point of departure.

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And that involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage,

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electronic, blah, blah, blah.

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So the ATPs don't even have to land somewhere else.

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Right.

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that said that has to be more than 50.

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So I guess until you have the ATP, it's worth logging only that greater than 50.

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Now, after that.

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Nothing really matters anymore.

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Yeah, log whatever you

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you can, you can log it all at that point.

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Yeah.

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Excellent.

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Well, uh, we didn't even pre plan that, but that, little personal story

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kinda helped illustrate how you can get into a rat hole, and then you're

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demonstrating perfectly how you can unravel all of these things, peel the

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onion, and get down to the bottom of it.

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So, that's good stuff.

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So this particular letter of interpretation, I'm not going to read

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the whole thing out, but basically what it says is that If you have three

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airports, A, B, and C, and none of them are more than 50 nautical miles from

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your home base, which is airport A, but airports B and C have more than 50

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nautical miles between them, and you fly A to B to C back to A, Because B

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and C have 50 nautical miles between them, if you log your flight from A to

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B, separately from your flight from B to C to A, you can log the B to C to A

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flight as cross country, and then not log the A to B flight as cross country, they

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just call that a repositioning flight.

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And so, it kind of seems to go a little bit against the spirit of the regulations,

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But, that's one of those questions where,

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uh, a lot of people ask, like, does each leg have to be more than 50 nautical

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miles, and that sort of thing, and it doesn't, like, you know, if you're working

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on your private pilot certificate, and you want to, hop to 10 different airports,

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none of which is more than, 10 miles away from the last one, as long as one of those

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airports is greater than 50 nautical miles from your point of origin, you're good.

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Alright,

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I've got it.

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I've got a couple, I know we've got some more scenarios, but if we could

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step away from the regs a little bit, give everybody's brain a little bit

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of a break, I've got a convention or maybe a suggestion, question for you.

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And this is a real scenario that's been coming up for me lately.

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As most folks know, I'm, I've been working on my CFI.

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I'm having a hard time.

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I'm ready for my check ride, but I'm having a hard time getting

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that check ride scheduled.

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So it's kind of dragging on for a while.

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This is not an uncommon problem these days.

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So, I'm doing all kinds of flying and a lot of the flying I'm doing, of

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course, I'm doing it from the right seat to continue to get more comfortable.

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And I'm taking my kids and anybody who's willing to be a Guinea pig and

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I'm teaching them things about flying.

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and so I've had the opportunity recently, for example, to take my son, who was

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already a private pilot and introduce him to some of the commercial maneuvers,

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acting as if I'm in his instructor, of course, in this case, I haven't done

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my checkride, so I'm not a CFI yet, so we can't log it as dual, but I can

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certainly teach him, demonstrate the maneuver, let him try the maneuver, you

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know, those sorts of things, and give him feedback and act like I'm an instructor.

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And so that's what I've been doing.

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Now in that case, because he's not logging dual and I'm not logging

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dual given, I, I am acting as PIC.

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But unless I'm demonstrating or doing the landing or something like that.

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I'm not able to log PIC time because he's logging PIC time as the

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sole manipulator of the controls.

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He's rated for the aircraft.

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So he, he can log that PIC time.

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Therefore I can't.

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so that's been an interesting thing.

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So I've got a question for you on how you might fill out

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a log book in this situation.

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So most log books have A column that says, I've got my log book

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open, so I'm going to be glancing at it says total duration of flight.

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And this goes to the scenario I was talking about earlier when we went

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with a friend, flew to breakfast and Merrick flew for part of it, I flew

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for part of it on the other direction.

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so what would you put, in the total duration of flight there?

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Would you put the amount of time you're logging PIC where you were

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the sole manipulator, the controls.

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Or would you put the total duration of the whole flight?

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what I would put in there is

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the total loggable duration of the flight.

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Um, and I actually have something in our notes here about

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things you can't log as well.

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loggable loggable for you.

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Is that what you're saying?

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correct.

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So,

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it would Matt.

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In other words, you would fill it

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out.

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You would fill it out.

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So it matches your PIC time in this scenario that I'm giving.

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Yes.

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So, there are really two kinds of total time.

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There's total flight time and there's total pilot time.

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The only difference between them is simulator time.

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So, essentially, total flight time, which is in an aircraft, off the

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ground, plus your simulator time would be your total pilot time.

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so, you know, you can choose for your own convention, you know, I have a,

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ground trainer, column in my log book.

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Um, some would call that simulator.

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but you know, you can choose whether total duration of flight

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is pilot time or flight time.

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Just because the word is flight, I have chosen to log flight time in that column.

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And so if someone asks for total pilot time, including simulator, in

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fact, I've got a, an entry right here where you can, um, Maybe see that.

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You can see on that second line there, I have nothing in total

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flight time because I logged it over here on the simulator column.

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So, that's that.

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Now, you probably are only putting in like a tenth or two of loggable

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time demonstrating maneuvers, right?

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Yeah, we did like a 1.

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2 and because I'm also practicing demonstrating, I got 0.

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3.

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Okay.

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So I calculated how much time I was sole manipulator of the controls and logged 0.

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3 on this particular flight of PIC and he logged the rest of it as PIC.

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I also did the, the takeoff and landing.

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So, that was additional, part of my 0.

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3.

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Yeah, so, I know that there are some people who will say things

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like, Well, it's your logbook.

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You can log whatever you want.

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And while that is true,

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um, to some extent, it also, you don't want to make it look like you're lying,

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you know, whether you end up applying for a job someday or you're having

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a chat with the FAA, maybe after a ramp check, maybe after an accident,

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hopefully not, but you know, if you have all this stuff in your logbook,

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And you have been logging time given the columns that are in most logbooks.

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Eh, that's going to be a pretty uncomfortable conversation.

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Well, why did you log this time in the 747 when clearly you're not rated for it?

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Yeah.

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Well, I like to log passenger time too.

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Well, yeah, don't put that in total time though.

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So,

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Well, there's another column to, same question.

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I think your answer is going to be pretty obvious, but there's another

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column for, you know, in this case, airplane single engine land.

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So category and class.

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So again, it sounds like you would log just the amount of time that

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matches what you're able to log as PIC since you're rated in it.

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yes.

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And then, because, you know, Single probably doesn't matter that much,

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but you probably right next to that have an airplane multi engine land

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column and that one is going to matter.

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you will be asked about that for insurance paperwork and for applying

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for jobs and all that kind of stuff.

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So in both of those cases, if you have a flight that you would like to put

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into your logbook for memory purposes, let's call it, you know, it's a

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flight that you want to remember and.

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Frankly, there are times when you, are getting some value from a flight,

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even if you can't necessarily log it.

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Yeah.

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and so in those cases, if you want to put something like that

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in your logbook, does your logbook have some blank columns in it?

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Um, it does.

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Yep.

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And I've written in things like, um, complex and high performance, things like

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that, that allow me to keep track of that.

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yeah.

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So, you know, looking in my logbook here, I've got single engine

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land, multi engine land, blank.

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Helicopter, as flight instructor, um,

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Yep.

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and the rest of them, I would probably actually use.

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So what I would suggest, and I, I didn't start doing this

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until actually very recently.

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I was working for a flight instructor.

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Part 135 operator, and I was only able to log maybe half of my time or so

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because we were flying single pilot airplanes and Any time that we were

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on a part 91 leg or if we were on a part 135 leg without passengers on

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board There's no method for me to be able to log PIC or really log anything

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and so I decided that What I would be doing with that is logging it under

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a new column that I call seat time.

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So if I was the pilot monitoring, not the pilot flying, and I was not acting

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as pilot in command of a 135 leg, then I would just log it as seat time.

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So my total time would be zero, cross country zero, landing zero,

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you know, all that stuff, but seat time, I would put that in.

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So, in your case, you could log 1.

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2 of seat time and 0.

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3 of PIC, for example.

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So,

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Right, right.

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I just, that's, I feel like that is a method to make it very clear

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that, hey, this is, this is time that wasn't necessarily loggable that

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I just wanted to have a record of.

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Very interesting.

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So yeah, we got a, got a little away from the regulations and more about

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convention and kind of best practices.

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But, but I thought that would be valuable as well.

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Along those same lines, Kent, what about in a situation where you

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hand the controls, over to a buddy who's not a rated pilot at all?

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So that is the zero asterisk I was talking about at the top, because guess what?

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You just handed the controls over.

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You're no longer the sole manipulator, right?

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Yep.

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But your buddy is not rated.

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And can't log it either.

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Zero pilots logging PIC.

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it.

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Right.

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Yep.

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But here's the asterisk.

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Someone asked for an interpretation on that one.

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And the FAA said.

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You know, in that instance, it's okay if you log it, even if you're not the, truly

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the sole manipulator of the controls.

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So, I don't have that interpretation handy here,

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but,

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it, it's almost like saying, let's not leave PIC time on the table.

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kind of, but yeah, I think that the, the FAA is view there was, well, in reality,

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you are still in control of the airplane.

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So we'll, uh, we'll let you have that one.

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And as long as we're on the subject, Let's talk about just the few

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different ways that you can log time.

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Let me go back to 6151 one last time here, hopefully.

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Alright, 6151E again here.

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we're going to just quickly tick off the boxes that will

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let you log something as PIC.

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So we've already talked about the sole manipulator rule a bunch.

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Number two here, when the pilot is the sole occupant in the aircraft.

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So student solo, that's the first time that you can log PIC because

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if you are the sole occupant of the aircraft, You don't have to be rated.

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so I guess technically, what did they call that kid?

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Uh, the, the barefoot bandit, I think,

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who for a while there was running around the country, stealing airplanes.

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Mostly the Pacific Northwest, Northwest, Right.

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Yeah.

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Technically he could lock it.

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Yeah.

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Uh,

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that's

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ever going to let him have a pilot certificate, but that's beside the point.

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So, third one here, and this is the one, that is important for, for the

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scenario where you have two people logging PIC, uh, where one is being

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the safety pilot for the other.

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So, number three, when the pilot, except for a holder of a sport or

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recreational pilot certificate, acts as pilot in command of an aircraft

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for which more than one pilot is required under the type certification

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of the aircraft or the regulations under which the flight is conducted.

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So, that covers a bunch of scenarios.

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If you are an airline pilot or, any sort of pilot where the aircraft

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requires two pilots, then, That's the part where it says where more

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than one pilot is required under the type certification of the aircraft.

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Now, I mentioned a minute ago flying under Part 135.

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So, it says, or the regulations under which the flight is conducted.

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So, in the particular

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including your

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where I was working.

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right.

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For a one 35.

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right.

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So, in Part 135, it specifically says that Two pilots are required on any

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leg with paying passengers on board.

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There is an exception to that, that some carriers have, and it's just

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called generally the autopilot in lieu exception, where if you have

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a functioning three axis autopilot, you don't need that second pilot.

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You do have to have Ops specs that allow your operation to

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use that autopilot and lube.

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And we just specifically did not get that ops spec because

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that's not how we operated.

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We always did everything with two pilots.

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I was able to log legs where I was not the pilot flying.

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Um, as long as we had passengers on board, if I was the acting pilot in command.

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so those are the only two scenarios where the acting pilot in command

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could Gets to log it just by virtue of being the acting pilot in command.

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But if you were not the.

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Not acting as pilot in command and it was not your leg to fly.

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So you were not the sole manipulator of the controls.

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Then you're not logging PIC.

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Correct.

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There are no boxes I can tick at that point.

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In fact, I couldn't log anything.

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So, And man, there's there's so many little Sub scenarios you can start

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to get in off of these regulations.

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It's it gets kind of crazy.

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we'll leave those for future.

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Yes, in fact, we would love feedback if you have questions

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on whether you can log something.

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I guess while we're on the subject, well, we'll come back to that in just a minute.

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There is one more, well, there's this number four, which is more

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involved in, uh, training flights and, there's an ATP one down here.

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So, um, if you are an ATP acting as pilot in command of an operation

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requiring an ATP certificate.

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You get to log it then.

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Which is also kind of covered by that one we were talking about a minute ago.

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But this is the one that I really wanted to jump down to is 6151E3.

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A Certificated Flight Instructor may log pilot in command flight time for

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all flight time while serving as the authorized instructor in an operation,

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if the instructor is rated to act as pilot in command of that aircraft.

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So, There's plenty of situations where, you can have people logging,

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two people logging PIC if one of them is acting as an instructor.

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Well, if you're, if you're giving instruction, then you

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are required crew at that point.

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So

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So let's talk about the good ol safety pilot thing.

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The way that you can get two pilots logging PIC at the

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same time, and you're not.

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a professional pilot.

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That's, that's the scenario we're talking about.

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yeah,

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The safety pilot, if the safety pilot is the acting PIC, and this is

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important, the safety pilot must be the acting PIC for both pilots to log PIC.

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The safety pilot does not have to be the PIC to log it, period.

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So.

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Pay attention to who is the PIC and is responsible for the flight

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because the safety pilot may be logging either PIC or SIC.

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and you know, it's more than just regulations that goes into that.

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So, let's say you and I go flying in my airplane

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and, you know, I'm, I'm.

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Under the hood and you're my safety pilot.

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Well, are you on my insurance?

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I'm

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not

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one reason why, you know?

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Right.

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So in that case, I'm gonna want to be the PIC because let's say I

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gear the thing up or something like that, and then you are the PIC.

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Well, now the insurance is gonna deny that claim.

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another thing would be, I was just thinking through the, uh, endorsements.

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So, my Mooney is both complex and high performance.

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You CANNOT act as PIC.

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on my airplane if you don't have those endorsements,

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so, um,

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Yeah.

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so those are a couple things to think about.

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yeah.

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You have to, you have to be qualified.

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You have to be qualified to act as PIC in that airplane, obviously, to act as PIC.

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correct.

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So if it's not an airplane that you can go and fly by yourself, then you should not,

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That includes, that include, I wanna bring this up too.

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That includes medicals.

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Yes,

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So you, you, have to have.

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All of the requirements to act as PIC, like you said, Kent, if

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you can't fly that airplane by yourself, you can't act as PIC.

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yeah.

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Now, a medical is required, Yeah.

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To be the safety pilot anyway, because you're still a required crew member.

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medicals are not just required for PICs.

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I should say, though, that BasicMed now does qualify.

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For quite a while after the BasicMed rule first came out,

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you had to have a legit medical certificate.

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It was, it was just due to the way that Congress wrote the law requiring the

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FAA to do BasicMed in the first place.

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They had not addressed that scenario, and the FAA had been dragging their feet

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on that whole idea for the longest time.

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And so they literally wrote the regulation exactly as Congress

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made them, and nothing else.

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And that was probably the most glaring issue with the whole thing was that, okay,

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now there's this whole scenario where I can fly the plane myself, but I can't sit

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in the right seat and look for traffic.

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Right,

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But yeah, they did finally address that more recently.

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So

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Did they address that with a regulation change or did they

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address it with an interpretation?

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that was

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a regulation change.

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So technically an interpretation of An interpretation is

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never changing a regulation.

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It is

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merely

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a

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but they can be

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of what the regulation means.

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uh, regulation can be ambiguous enough that it, it has the same effect though.

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Yeah, to an extent.

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but yeah, this particular one, it, it was not ambiguous at all.

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It, it said, yeah, you need to have a medical.

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it was really the, uh, The basic med rule didn't say that there was that exception.

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So

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Right.

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anyway, I don't want to get too far into the whole medical issue, but yes,

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to act as pilot in command, you need.

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everything.

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You need the endorsements, you need the medical, you need all that stuff.

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So, I think that that, you know, if you, if you can't fly the airplane on your

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own with friends in the back seat, you're also not qualified to be the acting P.

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I.

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C.

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That isn't to say that you can't be the safety pilot.

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But, we've covered a couple scenarios here with, insurance and endorsements and

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all that kind of stuff that you should be aware of, and you should also agree before

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the flight who the PIC is going to be so that there's no ambiguity there at all.

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You need to know who is in command of that flight.

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Right.

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so, all that said, Let's say you are the acting PIC safety pilot.

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Now we're coming down here to 6151E13 when the pilot, except for

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sport and recreational, acts as pilot in command of an aircraft.

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And I'm going to skip over the multi pilot aircraft.

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One's, section of this here, an aircraft under which, or for which more than one

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pilot is required under the regulations under which the flight is conducted.

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So, there is a regulation, I can't remember the number right now.

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offhand, but there is a regulation that requires a safety pilot when

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you're wearing a view limiting device.

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I'll put it up on the screen right

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that is the regulation under which the pilot is, or under

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which the flight is conducted.

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So let's drop down real quick to 6151F, logging of second in command flight time.

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right.

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That's just what I was going to ask.

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Because if you're the safety pilot and you cannot be the acting PIC,

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you may still log the time, it will just be second in command time.

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So, 6151 F1 is talking about multi pilot aircraft.

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6151 F2 is the pertinent regulation here.

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So, starting up at the main text here, a person may log second in

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command time Um, only for that flight time during which the person holds

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the appropriate category, class, and instrument rating if an instrument

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rating is required for the flight.

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If it's in VMC, it doesn't require an instrument rating, right?

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For the aircraft being flown and more than one pilot is required

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under the type certification of the aircraft or the regulations under

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which the flight is being conducted.

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So again, There is that regulation saying that you need the safety pilot.

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So that is the regulations under which the flight is being conducted.

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And again, here you see this word or before the last subsection, you

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know, so at the end of number two, it says, or which means you only

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need to check one of these three.

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If any of those three are true, you're good.

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So

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cool.

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Very

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cool.

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Yeah.

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Oh, I do want to suggest one more thing.

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I talked about an extra column for seat time.

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I also have put in an extra column now for acting pilot in command time.

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And the only reason for that is there are certain airlines who Disagree with the

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FAA on what should be locked as PIC, but they are not the FAA, so I'm going to log

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in my logbook what the FAA says to do.

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But, I have seen instructions on airline applications that say, for pilot and

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command time, we want you to fill out Only the time where you were the

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acting pilot in command of the flight.

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So I have also added an acting PIC column.

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Have you gone back and?

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Filled it all out for pre your previous career.

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Yep, I

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have.

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It actually wasn't that hard.

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Well, so what I did is, I went through the aircraft that are in my logbook.

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And some aircraft, I know I was never the acting pilot in command.

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And some, you always were.

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friends who let me fly their planes and stuff like that, but they were

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always with me and that sort of stuff.

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there are some, aircraft for which I knew I was always the acting pilot in command.

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And then there were, you know, some aircraft where it

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could have been either or, so.

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I just automated the whole process and said, okay, we'll do a V look

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up here and check the tail number against the list here and just

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check on whether that aircraft was an always a never or a sometimes.

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And,

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um,

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interesting.

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And tell me how you've done that in, in your four flight log

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book, your electronic log book,

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so ForeFlight lets you put in, um, custom columns.

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Let me actually, uh, go to

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ForeFlight

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logbook here.

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All right.

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So under settings,

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You can see here, all of these ones at the top with checkboxes are columns

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that ForeFlight includes, and you can decide whether to display them or not.

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So you can see, for example, I don't have the night vision goggles checked,

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because I have never flown with night vision goggles, and probably won't.

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Um, yeah, sounds like it'd be kind of cool,

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right?

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that sounds pretty fun to

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me.

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Yeah, so you can see down at the bottom here, I have four custom fields.

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and then there's this little new field link, that you can click

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and just create a new field.

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Let's do that for the heck of it because I want to pull up the types you can do.

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You can do text, numeric, hours, counter, date, date and time, or toggle.

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So you can have just a Um, so those are the options for your, your custom

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field types, but you can have, as far as I know, they don't have a

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limit on the number of custom fields.

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but I would check on that if you're going to do

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A ton of

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them, uh, because there may be a limit.

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That would be hard to manage anyway.

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So I would stay away from that if you can.

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yeah, yeah.

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And one of the things that I did notice is when you have a custom field, you know,

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in ForeFlight, they always put the button.

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Once you fill in the total time, a lot of the other ones will have a little

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button that appears that says, use 1.

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5 or whatever you put in for the total time.

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The custom fields don't get that.

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So you do end up having to manually key it every time.

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Yeah.

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I was thinking you could almost make that column that when you were

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just talking about a toggle field.

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And if you ever had to, if you ever had to add up your total PIC where

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you were acting PIC, you could just look up the total duration of the

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flights where that was toggled on.

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yeah.

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you could, you could

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And let me show you how this looks too.

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Build my experience report here those custom fields.

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It does by aircraft type So this is for flight standard experience report And

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when you have the custom fields if you come down here to the bottom It shows

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each type of flying that I have in You know acting PIC part 135 and seat

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hours are all done by aircraft type.

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there is the totals at the bottom here.

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Very cool.

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but yeah, that's what that looks like.

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Excellent.

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Well, Kent, any other, um, last things you wanted to say about this vast topic?

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I think we have pretty well beat that one to death.

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Um, like I said, there are a bunch of little tiny exceptions and

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asterisks and stuff like that, that you can get into on this.

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And so, you know, Please don't automatically go and start logging

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everything as PIC just because you heard two random guys on a podcast tell you to.

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Make sure that you can actually back that up by reading the regulations

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that we've pointed you to, reading interpretations, and you know what?

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If you have a question, by all means send it in and we'd love to answer it.

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We, we like to do the research to call us crazy.

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Yes, we are that kind of crazy and please, FAA, don't take our medicals away.

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Heh heh heh heh heh heh.

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Excellent.

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Well, Kent, this, this was an awesome topic.

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Certainly needed.

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I know that there's always a lot of confusion about this.

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And a lot of this discussion helps me personally to wrap my head around

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some of these scenarios that pop up.

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When you get a lot more experience in your career, things are going to pop up.

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That you're thinking, Hmm, haven't seen this before.

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And so these are the types of things, especially showing people

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how to go find the regs to find the interpretations and kind of make

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their decisions based on those.

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So appreciate this great topic, great coverage of the topic.

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You never cease to amaze me on the depth of, of knowledge that

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you have on some of these things.

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So thank you very much.

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This was cool.

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Yeah, this was fun.

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It's always, uh, always fun to geek out about this stuff.

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All right, Kent.

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So we'll see you next time on, on beyond the check ride.

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Thanks again.

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Alright, we'll see ya.

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Okay, everyone.

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I hope you liked that topic as usual.

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And like I said before, As usual.

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And like I said before, we'd love to get feedback, comments,

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your own stories, all of it.

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So reach out to us.

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Logging is obviously a big topic.

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We didn't even cover it nearly comprehensively.

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And it took us over an hour.

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There is a lot of nuance and a lot of detail, but hopefully we covered

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the basics and the common scenarios that people get tripped up on.

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More importantly, Kent showed you how to figure it out for yourself, by diving

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into the rags and the interpretations.

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And so on.

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So, I guess it's time to get out there.

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And lug some more time.