midcap
Pattern Altitude
Just being curious, what about your first solo?
That was easy.
But what if the sim is on a treadmill, in the back of a semi, going down the highway?
Added highlight for another word in your quote. A simulator sitting on the ground isn't a "flight."They say there are no dumb questions. However...
Part 61:
Cross-country time means -
(i) Except as provided in paragraphs (ii) through (vi) of this definition, time acquired during flight -
(A) Conducted by a person who holds a pilot certificate;
(B) Conducted in an aircraft;
Ah, but is using a simulator that is inside a flying cargo plane (a) time acquired during flight and (b) conducted in an aircraft? We need a sacrificial guinea pig (and a sacrificial CFI to endorse the guinea pig’s logbook) to take this to a DPE and see how it goes.Added highlight for another word in your quote. A simulator sitting on the ground isn't a "flight."
They say there are no dumb questions. However...
Part 61:
Cross-country time means -
(i) Except as provided in paragraphs (ii) through (vi) of this definition, time acquired during flight -
(A) Conducted by a person who holds a pilot certificate;
(B) Conducted in an aircraft;
what if the sim is in the cargo compartment of a C-130?
Ah, but is using a simulator that is inside a flying cargo plane (a) time acquired during flight and (b) conducted in an aircraft? We need a sacrificial guinea pig (and a sacrificial CFI to endorse the guinea pig’s logbook) to take this to a DPE and see how it goes.
Where does the FAA call it “flying by instruments” time in a simulator/ATD?It sounds like a dumb question but then the FAA allows you to complete most of your 'flying by instruments' time in a properly rated sim that doesn't have any feedback.
Sounds like a good topic for the “second career pilot who decided not to continue flying” podcast.Where is the sacrificial @SixPapaCharlie with his FSDO fast pass. This is right up his alley!!!
Yes, but the FAR specifically says what it can be counted for. More importantly, it says so because it has been found to be very valuable for both procedural training and - I think in large part due to that lack of feedback - scan development.It sounds like a dumb question but then the FAA allows you to complete most of your 'flying by instruments' time in a properly rated sim that doesn't have any feedback.
Also a good chunk of IFR time can be done in a Redbird. Just learning to flip the buttons is expensive when billed by hobbs.
Sounds like a good topic for the “second career pilot who decided not to continue flying” podcast.
Only if it's a sim where you actually die when you crash.Just being curious, what about your first solo?
I suspect the reason devices can only be used to meet some requirements is exactly that. People talk about the hood vs actual all the time, from both a realism and psychological standpoint. How about the hood vs never leaving the ground at all?If you use a sim, you lose the flavor of a real X-C. Things like getting cut off on base-to-final by some yahoo on a straight in. The FBO refusing your credit card. The darned engine won't crank. The WX turns ugly.
I just noticed this. I'm not sure what you mean. No, the phrase "flying by instruments" does not appear in any FAA publication I am aware of. But the use of a device to for simulated instrument flight including meeting requirements for flight "solely by reference to the [flight] instruments" appears in multiple places.Where does the FAA call it “flying by instruments” time in a simulator/ATD?
Where does the FAA call it “flying by instruments” time in a simulator/ATD?
The phrase “flying by instruments” was used exactly that way, in quotes, by @pfarber . I presumed it had to do with the thread’s premise of fulfilling “flight” requirements in a simulator, rather than being a reference to flight instruments. Very few of the instrument requirements reference “flight” time or experience.I just noticed this. I'm not sure what you mean. No, the phrase "flying by instruments" does not appear in any FAA publication I am aware of. But the use of a device to for simulated instrument flight including meeting requirements for flight "solely by reference to the [flight] instruments" appears in multiple places.
I'm not saying you are wrong, just that I don't follow. I think there are plenty of flight time requirements in 61.65 including the dual cross country and the 3 hours of prep. For the remainder, training credit in various devices is limited; anything else is "flight." No?The phrase “flying by instruments” was used exactly that way, in quotes, by @pfarber . I presumed it had to do with the thread’s premise of fulfilling “flight” requirements in a simulator, rather than being a reference to flight instruments. Very few of the instrument requirements reference “flight” time or experience.
I (probably wrongly) assume that people use quotation marks to actually mean something.I guess I never thought of his use of the words "flying by instruments" as a regulatory reference any more that I think of your use of the term "simulator" as any more than a generic collective term to cover the regulatory terms for various devices.
In that sense it's no different than flying for currency in simulated conditions. You can't pause, but you can pull the hood off when you get confused or tired of having the autopilot fly the same approach to your home airport which you know like the back of your hand over and over.Using a simulator to stay current,sounds like a good idea. But when you get in actual you can’t pause the airplane,because your confused.
But you can let go of the controls just before you impact the ground on a checkride, turn around, and say, “I want to do that again.”Using a simulator to stay current,sounds like a good idea. But when you get in actual you can’t pause the airplane,because your confused.
I (probably wrongly) assume that people use quotation marks to actually mean something.
Easier than providing a source or responding to direct questions, I guess."I plan on using random quotes forever" now.