Luckypants
Filing Flight Plan
Can I legally file and fly IFR solo when in VMC if I don't have the rating?
Can I legally file and fly IFR solo when in VMC if I don't have the rating?
File and fly are two different things. Nothing precludes you from filing anything, theoretically. Accepting an instrument clearance however...
How about when one is a student and the instructor asks the student to call up and file IFR for an instructional flight?
If you're not current and your safety pilot isn't instrument rated, who is going to be PIC?If you are instrument rated but not current can you file an instrument flight plan if you have a safety pilot (non instrument)?
Perfectly fine as long as the instructor is named as PIC on the flight plan.How about when one is a student and the instructor asks the student to call up and file IFR for an instructional flight?
Oh, so you do your 6HITS under VFR and THEN fly IFR. That would work. Just be sure you have your logbook along and LOG the currency before you accept the clearance.
If you're not current and your safety pilot isn't instrument rated, who is going to be PIC?
Oh, so you do your 6HITS under VFR and THEN fly IFR. That would work. Just be sure you have your logbook along and LOG the currency before you accept the clearance.
edit: not sure I buy the "intent to violate 61.3". I've heard that before in the context of checking the IFR box and then filing with VFR/xxx in the altitude box. How can you "intend" to violate if you don't actually violate (i.e. accept the clearance)? Especially if you're offered a clearance and you say "negative, 345 is VFR"?
It's easy: If you're not rated or current, why else would you be filing an IFR flight plan as PIC if you didn't intend to violate 61.3(e)? You can "buy it" or not, I'm just reporting what the FAA has put in writing. I've posted the interpretation before; if it's not still around, then I can post it again.
The FAA also mentions, in the same interpretation, that accepting a clearance has nothing to do with determining an intent to violate, or whether a violation has occurred. I can accept a clearance without even being a pilot, but I can't act as PIC under IFR.
JKG
Since when do you have to be PIC to file anything? Alert the airlines...
FWIW
....he is the one that accepts the clearance.
The FAA has stated, via legal interpretation, that they consider the filing of an IFR flight plan by an individual who does not possess an Instrument rating to be a clear intent to violate 61.3(e), regardless of whether the pilot requests or accepts an IFR clearance. This is true even if the pilot is an instrument student on a dual flight, with an apporpriately rated CFI in the right seat--the student can file the flight plan, but the CFI's name must go in the PIC block.
Agreed. Of course that doesn't prove they didn't write the interpretation, they've come up with lots of idiotic nonsense before. But then a VFR-only pilot who checks the IFR box by accident and files what he thinks is a VFR plan electronically is already guilty of a FAR violation. I would like to see them make that stick, especially if the filed altitude was a VFR altitude or an ambiguous altitude like 3000. If they really can, then VFR pilots using Foreflight need to be careful, because that is fairly easy to do if you're in a hurry.Ridiculous. There is no language in FAR 61.3(e) that supports that position.
If anyone can come up with an enforcement action where the sole basis was the filing of an IFR flight plan by a non IFR-qualified PIC, without his actually accepting an IFR clearance or flying in IMC, I will be very surprised.
Since when do you have to be PIC to file anything? Alert the airlines...
My post mentioned nothing about PIC.
But to answer your question: For practice; on behalf the rated and current pic flying with you; as a student about to launch with a CFII...
I never said that anyone had to be PIC to file anything; in fact, I specifically mentioned that who does the filing isn't important. What I did say is that, according to an FAA Chief Counsel interpretation:
a) The FAA considers filing a flight plan with an unqualified pilot listed as PIC to be an intent to violate the regulations;
b) The FAA does not consider accepting a clearance by such as a person as any kind of "trigger" action for a violation.
If you disagree, the disagreement isn't with me, it's with the Chief Counsel's office.
Ridiculous. There is no language in FAR 61.3(e) that supports that position.
If true, it speaks volumes about the intelligence and competence of the Chief Counsel.
If anyone can come up with an enforcement action where the sole basis was the filing of an IFR flight plan by a non IFR-qualified PIC, without his actually accepting an IFR clearance or flying in IMC, I will be very surprised.
Supports what position? That a pilot without and Instrument rating can't be Pilot In Command under IFR?
You better go back and re-read FAR 61.3(e).
If you're arguing that the filing of a flight plan by a pilot without an Instrument rating is not a violation, you better go back and re-read what I wrote. Carefully this time.
See post #19.Seems logical to me. Why else would a non-qualified pilot list himself as PIC on a flight plan if he didn't intend to violate the regulations?
Seems logical to me.
I never said that anyone had to be PIC to file anything; in fact, I specifically mentioned that who does the filing isn't important. What I did say is that, according to an FAA Chief Counsel interpretation:
a) The FAA considers filing a flight plan with an unqualified pilot listed as PIC to be an intent to violate the regulations;
b) The FAA does not consider accepting a clearance by such as a person as any kind of "trigger" action for a violation.
If you disagree, the disagreement isn't with me, it's with the Chief Counsel's office.
JKG
The filing of an IFR flight plan by a pilot without an instrument rating is not a violation. Any person that reads that regulation and concludes otherwise does not understand what he has read.
I've posted the interpretation before; if it's not still around, then I can post it again.
Again, you guys need to read what I've written. More carefully this time.
Accepting a clearance and/or flying in IMC does not trigger a violation. A person acting as Pilot In Command of a flight operated under IFR must meet the qualifications in FAR 61.3(e), regardless of the status of a clearance or weather conditions.
Who is claiming that it is?
See post #19.
Also, there is the technique of checking the IFR box and putting "VFR/<some VFR altitude>" in the altitude box. Strictly technically, that is an "IFR flight plan" and I've heard a reliable report of an FAA lawyer who considers the FAA position to be that a VFR pilot filing such a flight plan to be in violation of 61.3. But as Steven has explained a number of times, the result of filing that plan is simply a VFR strip, indistinguishable from one created by a controller after the pilot called up for flight following. I would really like to hear the stretch of logic by which filing such a plan by someone not legal to act as PIC under IFR could be interpreted as showing intent to violate 61.3(e).
Personally I think that if they want 61.3 to say what they say it says, they should write it that way and stop creating new regs by "interpretation" .
According to you, the FAA is.
That's a nice thought, but it's impossible for the FAA to write clarity into all of the regulations. And let's be honest, do we REALLY want them to do that?
In my letter to the Chief Counsel requesting the interpretation back in 2008, I specifically asked about the "IFR/VFR" technique, and the response was the same as I've noted here. How ATC sees the strip is really immaterial to how the FAA sees the intent of filing an IFR flight plan by a non-qualified pilot.
Again, I'm just the messenger. I'm not telling anyone what to do, but I am opining that claiming yourself as qualified to conduct a certain type of operation when you're not qualified to do so likely carries with it some type of unnecessary risk.
So is it a violation of a regulation to exhibit what a law enforcement agency considers "evidence of an intent" to violate that regulation?
If the answer is yes, then we are governed not by laws but by men.