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Checkride - count as PIC?

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Checkride - count as PIC?

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Old 28th Jul 2009, 18:56
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Checkride - count as PIC?

Just a quickie....

.....can a low hours PPL include a checkride (on to say a C152 from a PA28) as PIC time given that the checkride's done with an instructor?

Thanks.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 19:00
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incoming..........
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 19:45
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who was pilot in command? Was the checkride instruction?
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 19:49
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That's essentially my question. I'd do the checkride sooner rather than later if I'd get the hours. If not, I'll hang fire until I need to do it.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:04
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What on earth is the obsession with P1? Flying is flying, P1 or PUT makes little difference in the global scheme of things. If the P1 time is that precious to you then you are not mature enough as a pilot.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:08
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If the flight demands an instructor (club rules?) then it is an instructional flight and you are PUT.

PS. Bose may have a few thousand hours so he's probably forgotten how important those first few dozen were.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:11
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That's the problem with Pprune. Somebody asks a simple question and within a couple of posts gets insulted (quite often by someone with 1000s of posts).

Maybe if you looked down from your lofty perch you would see people who cannot afford to go flying much, placing a value on P1 time.

If you cannot help, or don't want to help, shut up.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:17
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Thanks Cows - I thought that may be the case.

Bose, my good man, go find some valium. I'm working towards a CPL on a tight budget.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:22
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I thought it was a sensible question - I'd had similar thoughts about a check out for a different airfield (short grass strip). In the end I've recorded it as P1/S as what I was told for the flight test. Is this wrong? The club don't charge instruction rates for checkouts so I don't think they consider it as instruction, merely checking that you're safe.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:25
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I know the feeling, I was once there trying to get my 100hrs for CPL. My advice is to take the hit on the odd hour P u/t if it gets you access to a new type or whatever. However, then remember that currency is king in your hours building - I always advise that hours builders at our club should aim to fly at least every fortnight (every week ideally), even if you are struggling for cash it is better to do a 20min trip every week rather than a 3hr splurge in a day every other month. That way your flying skills stay fresh and you avoid the chance of going out of club currency (if you aim for at least every other week you have a buffer for weather, illness, tech a/c etc.. then as well). Good luck with it.

ps - on the P1 issue. Whoever was agreed as ac commander (and should be shown on tech log / auth sheet whatever) logs P1. If that person was an instructor, the other person may log P u/t. Nothing else (excludes exam flights) is worth the paper it is written on.
 
Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:33
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bose-x you grumpy old bugger

Those first 500 hours are so special.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:42
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PintofT>

JAR-FCL 1.080(c)(5):

PICUS (Pilot-in-command under supervision)

Provided that the method of supervision is acceptable to the Authority, a co-pilot may log as PIC flight time flown as PICUS, when all of the duties and functions of PIC on that flight were carried out, such that the intervention of the PIC in the interest of safety was not required.

---


That may answer your question - hopefully to your satisfaction.

Sepp

Looking down from a lofty Postholder's perch - and constantly hoping my arse isn't sticking out of the tree too far...
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:52
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SEPP, you stuck your arse so far out of the tree that a kid with a pellet gun would hit it with a blindfold on and one arm tied to their own arse......

PICUS is ONLY ever used for the successful completion of a flight test when talking about single pilot aircraft. You are either P1 or PUT in a single pilot aircraft unless having successfully completed a flight test with an examiner.

bose-x you grumpy old bugger

Those first 500 hours are so special.
OK, MJ valid point. I forgot every minute counts to the eager beavers.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:53
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No that only works if it is a dual pilot aircraft.

Its will be PUT in this day with instructors grabbing the hours.

It really isn't worth trying to blag it. All that ends up happening is they send back all your paper work after waiting 5 weeks and tell you that you need to get more PIC time. Then it will take another 5 weeks for your CPL to arrive.

Bose-X really has it straight these things seem very important when your in triple figures Once your up into 1000's it really doesn't bother you.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 20:55
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Except, Sepp, that there is no such thing as a 'co-pilot' on SPA aeroplanes such as the C152.

Picture the scene. A wet behind the ears pilot goes out to C152 with experienced FI. Wet behind the ears pilot has decided that he will be PIC as he needs to build his hours for some future co-pilot job on 737s.

"Are we ready yet, captain?" asks the FI.

"Err, yes. I think so."

"Oh good. Has it got much fuel in the tanks?"

"Err, the gauges say so."

"Well, did you look in the tanks?"

"How do you do that?"

"Do you want me to tell you?"

"Err, yes please."

"Well, that'll be instruction then.... You are thus P u/t and I, as PIC will give you instruction. Understood?"

"Err, yes"

"Good!"
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 21:08
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Thanks Cows - I thought that may be the case.

Bose, my good man, go find some valium. I'm working towards a CPL on a tight budget.
And without being funny....... Utterly pointless in a global downturn. Currency is king. You have as much chance of getting a job with a minimum hours CPL as I have of winning personality of the year.......

Make your hours count not just be obsessed with the column they fit in.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 21:19
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well if you on a scotsmans budget why are you messing around with a 4 seater.

A 3 axis mogas machine is the way forward.
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 21:40
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Bose-x: lol, well, it wouldn't be the first time; it's a big enough target... and there's nowt wrong with being grumpy, or old - or indeed a bugger. Having survived long enough to be any combination of the three, it is sort of a human right.

"Make your hours count not just be obsessed with the column they fit in."

Couldn't agree more!
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Old 28th Jul 2009, 22:55
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So....erm...er, in the event of a successful flight test, the candidate is P1s, and the examiner is P1?

Doesn't that make two P ones? or is one pilot P1 and the other one a super dooper P1?
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Old 29th Jul 2009, 01:43
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I always recorded check flights as PI/S back in the '70s, because that's what it is! you are pilot in command but under supervision.

SoCal App...Have you a constructive input to this thread? What would you enter it under? It is important, as your logbook is a legal document, and any entries must be accurate.
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