Nope, and it's no longer BFR, just FR.
Extra time required for asking the question.I just passed the IFR written, but have not yet passed the practical. Can I use this as my BFR "book" component and just do the BFR flight?
Never was anything but, really, but it's never ever been anything other than every two years (the annual flight review provision never went into effect).
However, I'm not convinced (and I'm drawing a blank finding it), that the 61.56 ever had a title other than FLIGHT REVIEW.
Probably because too many people couldn't figure out the difference between the words "Biannual" and "Biennial."Used to be called a BFR, Biennial Flight Review. I forget when they (FAA) shortened it to FR.
Funny, but probably true. )Probably because too many people couldn't figure out the difference between the words "Biannual" and "Biennial."
There is nothing in the FR reg that talks about a "book component." There is a ground component that, except for requiring coverage of Part 91, leaves it to instructor discretion.I just passed the IFR written, but have not yet passed the practical. Can I use this as my BFR "book" component and just do the BFR flight?
I just passed the IFR written, but have not yet passed the practical. Can I use this as my BFR "book" component and just do the BFR flight?
Are you actively working with an instructor towards your instrument rating? If so, I have to imagine they'd have no problem signing you off for a flight review based on the flight and ground work already completed. I know I've done this once or twice - an instrument student (or commercial, etc.) faces some delays in training and isn't able to schedule their checkride until after their previous FR would expire. But I have flown with them multiple times, doing all the kinds of stuff you would do in the FR, plus we've already done plenty of ground time on similar topics to those discussed during a FR as well. I'll just sign them off based on training already completed. BUT, it's training that I've personally conducted, know the details of, and have documented in their logbooks.
It would seem silly to me if I have been flying for the last 20 hours with somebody, doing maneuvers, stalls, hood work, approaches, emergency procedures, etc., as well as many hours of discussion about regulations, part 91, weather, flight planning, etc., to then say "You want a Flight Review? Sure, let's go talk about the same stuff for another hour and go flying doing basically the same stuff we've been doing for yet another hour, then I'll sign you off."
That says nothing about when they made the change or if it ever was listed as anything other than "Flight Review" even though people (including the FAA) colloquially called it a BFR. Your 2015 date is certainly bogus. It has been a FLIGHT REVIEW since at least 1973. I'm looking for older versions of the regs.