Reading regulation legalese is always fun.
In regards to the total hour requirements per 61.109(a) and 61.129(a): 109 states "at least 40 hours of flight time..." and 129 states "at least 250 hours of flight time as a pilot..." Now, logic tells me that the 40 and 250 are total time, period. It is the use of the wording "as a pilot" in 129 that caught my eye. Would that imply the 250 hours comes from PIC time, whereas the 40 doesn't (since you don't earn all those hours as PIC during training for PPL)? Or did that 250-hour clock for your CPL start the first lesson you took for your PPL? Another reason I'm curious is someone once pointed out the wording in 61.109(a)(3) "3 hours of flight training... solely by reference to instruments..." and 61.129(a)(3)(i) "Ten hours of instrument training..." The point was made that, given the wording, the training in 109 did not require a CFI-I (the CFI is more acting as an instructor/safety pilot during those 3 hours of training), but the training in 129 required a CFI-I because of the use of the words "instrument training".
Lastly, in 61.129(a)(4) it begins "Ten hours of solo flight time in a single engine airplane or 10 hours of flight time performing the duties of pilot in command in a single engine airplane with an authorized instructor on board..." The "or" implying it isn't 10 hours total of solo or not solo but performing as PIC, but 10 hours of one or the other. Thoughts?
Nitpicking the wording, but every now and then in training someone drops a little gee wiz knowledge they've gained over the years, and I'm curious how you'd all interpret the wording above. Thanks!
In regards to the total hour requirements per 61.109(a) and 61.129(a): 109 states "at least 40 hours of flight time..." and 129 states "at least 250 hours of flight time as a pilot..." Now, logic tells me that the 40 and 250 are total time, period. It is the use of the wording "as a pilot" in 129 that caught my eye. Would that imply the 250 hours comes from PIC time, whereas the 40 doesn't (since you don't earn all those hours as PIC during training for PPL)? Or did that 250-hour clock for your CPL start the first lesson you took for your PPL? Another reason I'm curious is someone once pointed out the wording in 61.109(a)(3) "3 hours of flight training... solely by reference to instruments..." and 61.129(a)(3)(i) "Ten hours of instrument training..." The point was made that, given the wording, the training in 109 did not require a CFI-I (the CFI is more acting as an instructor/safety pilot during those 3 hours of training), but the training in 129 required a CFI-I because of the use of the words "instrument training".
Lastly, in 61.129(a)(4) it begins "Ten hours of solo flight time in a single engine airplane or 10 hours of flight time performing the duties of pilot in command in a single engine airplane with an authorized instructor on board..." The "or" implying it isn't 10 hours total of solo or not solo but performing as PIC, but 10 hours of one or the other. Thoughts?
Nitpicking the wording, but every now and then in training someone drops a little gee wiz knowledge they've gained over the years, and I'm curious how you'd all interpret the wording above. Thanks!