Dean
Pattern Altitude
On the 250nm VFR XC day and night, do those have to be done with a CFI? I have done a day VFR XC of that distance, but it was by myself. Will it count toward the requirement?
Dean said:On the 250nm VFR XC day and night, do those have to be done with a CFI? I have done a day VFR XC of that distance, but it was by myself. Will it count toward the requirement?
14 CFR 61.129 said:(a) For an airplane single-engine rating. Except as provided in paragraph (i) of this section, a person who applies for a commercial pilot certificate with an airplane category and single-engine class rating must log at least 250 hours of flight time as a pilot that consists of at least:
(4) 10 hours of solo flight in a single-engine airplane on the areas of operation listed in §61.127(b)(1) of this part, which includes at least—
(i) One cross-country flight of not less than 300 nautical miles total distance, with landings at a minimum of three points, one of which is a straight-line distance of at least 250 nautical miles from the original departure point. However, if this requirement is being met in Hawaii, the longest segment need only have a straight-line distance of at least 150 nautical miles; and
I did, and the reason I asked was because I know someone who did his with his CFI, The long XC that is. I have done a 370nm trip with three stops and one leg was 254nm and was told that it wouldn't count.midlifeflyer said:Read the requirement and you'll have your answer.
flyingcheesehead said:Remember, that's solo as in sole human occupant of the airplane. A trip with the family aboard doesn't count, for unknown reasons. FAA logic I guess.
Dean said:I did, and the reason I asked was because I know someone who did his with his CFI, The long XC that is. I have done a 370nm trip with three stops and one leg was 254nm and was told that it wouldn't count.
Presuming we're talking about single-engine commercial, this is true. If you're interested in multi commercial, there's another thread around talking about that.flyingcheesehead said:The "long" one is strictly solo.
There is no such requirement. There are requirements for...Dean said:On the 250nm VFR XC day and night, do those have to be done with a CFI?
Insufficient data. Was it really solo (i.e., no live human being other than yourself aboard), or just without an instructor (i.e., with a non-pilot passenger). Was the total distance over 300 nm, or was it a 250nm one way trip without a return leg?I have done a day VFR XC of that distance, but it was by myself. Will it count toward the requirement?
That would be correct, as the 300nm solo XC must be solo.Dean said:I did, and the reason I asked was because I know someone who did his with his CFI, The long XC that is.
Was it flown solo? Was one of the landings more than 250nm from the original point of departure?I have done a 370nm trip with three stops and one leg was 254nm and was told that it wouldn't count.
SkyHog said:I still don't understand why there are dual xcs required for the commercial. As a Private Pilot, I can fly those cross countries anyways, what is the difference if there's a CFI on board or not?
SkyHog said:I still don't understand why there are dual xcs required for the commercial.
(a) For an airplane single-engine rating. Except as provided in paragraph (i) of this section, a person who applies for a commercial pilot certificate with an airplane category and single-engine class rating must log at least 250 hours of flight time as a pilot that consists of at least:
(1) 100 hours in powered aircraft, of which 50 hours must be in airplanes.
(2) 100 hours of pilot-in-command flight time, which includes at least—
(i) 50 hours in airplanes; and
(ii) 50 hours in cross-country flight of which at least 10 hours must be in airplanes.
(3) 20 hours of training on the areas of operation listed in §61.127(b)(1) of this part that includes at least—
(i) 10 hours of instrument training of which at least 5 hours must be in a single-engine airplane;
(ii) 10 hours of training in an airplane that has a retractable landing gear, flaps, and a controllable pitch propeller, or is turbine-powered, or for an applicant seeking a single-engine seaplane rating, 10 hours of training in a seaplane that has flaps and a controllable pitch propeller;
(iii) One cross-country flight of at least 2 hours in a single-engine airplane in day VFR conditions, consisting of a total straight-line distance of more than 100 nautical miles from the original point of departure;
(iv) One cross-country flight of at least 2 hours in a single-engine airplane in night VFR conditions, consisting of a total straight-line distance of more than 100 nautical miles from the original point of departure; and
(v) 3 hours in a single-engine airplane in preparation for the practical test within the 60-day period preceding the date of the test.
(4) 10 hours of solo flight in a single-engine airplane on the areas of operation listed in §61.127(b)(1) of this part, which includes at least—
(i) One cross-country flight of not less than 300 nautical miles total distance, with landings at a minimum of three points, one of which is a straight-line distance of at least 250 nautical miles from the original departure point. However, if this requirement is being met in Hawaii, the longest segment need only have a straight-line distance of at least 150 nautical miles; and
(ii) 5 hours in night VFR conditions with 10 takeoffs and 10 landings (with each landing involving a flight in the traffic pattern) at an airport with an operating control tower.
Other than the original poster, who was promptly informed of that misperception, who said it did? In any event, it's a 300nm solo XC, not 250nm, although most folks fly a 500nm trip by going out 250nm and then back.smigaldi said:Where does it say that the solo 250NM XC has to be done under VFR?
Ron Levy said:My guess is the FAA wants to be sure you can visually navigate XC to Commercial standards, which are tighter than Private standards, because as a Commercial Pilot, you may be called upon to do so with paying passengers.
Ed Guthrie said:Where do you find the completion standards (commercial, or private for that matter) for the x-country flight, other than distance and flight conditions? IOW, the completion standards you infer as being the FAA's reason simply don't exist. With respect to meeting x-country aeronautical experience requirements for a certficate or rating a flight is a flight so long as the flight condition (i.e. VFR or IFR) and distance criteria are met. Whether one bobs and weaves all over creation or holds to a heading/course and altitude as if on a rail, it all counts. FWIW, there may have been a correlation between the private x-country dropping from 300 nm to 150 nm and the commercial certificate picking up a longer x-country requirement, or there may have been some link to ICAO requirements, or there might be some other logic, but "be sure you can visually navigate XC to Commercial standards" wasn't the reason.
In the PTS:Ed Guthrie said:Where do you find the completion standards (commercial, or private for that matter) for the x-country flight, other than distance and flight conditions?
What are the Practical Test Standards, then? How else does an instructor know what's good enough?IOW, the completion standards you infer as being the FAA's reason simply don't exist.
So, you would sign off an applicant for Private or Commercial who "bobb[ed] and weav[ed] all over creation" during a dual XC? Remember, the endorsement you sign says the applicant flies well enough to pass the practical test. How would you know about the applicant's XC nav skills unless you flew an XC or two with the applicant? I think that's all the FAA wants -- to make sure that every area/task is covered somewhere in the training.With respect to meeting x-country aeronautical experience requirements for a certficate or rating a flight is a flight so long as the flight condition (i.e. VFR or IFR) and distance criteria are met. Whether one bobs and weaves all over creation or holds to a heading/course and altitude as if on a rail, it all counts.
Who in AFS-800 told you that? Note that I didn't say that's what they said -- it's a guess on my part, but a guess based on the PTS requirements....but "be sure you can visually navigate XC to Commercial standards" wasn't the reason.
"Partly" is correct.lancefisher said:Yeah, I thought the commercial was partly about understanding and using the aircraft's systems.
There is most definitely such a requirement in the Commercial PTS -- Area VII, Task A:I can't see anything that requires you to navigate by ground reference on the required XCs, even if there is such a requirement in the PTS.
Ron Levy said:In the PTS:
What are the Practical Test Standards, then? How else does an instructor know what's good enough?
So, you would sign off an applicant for Private or Commercial who "bobb[ed] and weav[ed] all over creation" during a dual XC?
OK, then what do you use as the completion standard for whether or not a trainee is ready for the practical test? The issue here is not whether the time counts, but whether the trainee is ready for the test. If you don't evaluate those skills, and you don't have any standards for performance by which to determine whether the desired learning has occurred, how can you make that decision? For that reason, based on past written statements from within AFS-800, I have good reason to believe that AFS-800 was thinking along those lines when they put the "VFR conditions" line in that reg. Whether they worded it properly enough to legally require that it be done using DR/pilotage is beyond my ken (you can ask for an official legal interpretation if you want), but I know that was their intent when they wrote the reg, albeit possibly imperfectly.Ed Guthrie said:Ron, the PTS is the completion standard for the test. The PTS is not the completion standard with respect to whether or not the aeronautical experience can be applied towards the certificate requirements.
Unless you can quote that alleged suggestion (accurately and completely, please), there is no need to do so, since I don't believe I ever said that.You suggested that there are completion standards for the aeronautical experience. Once again, please cite your source for this claim.
Again, you are putting words in my mouth. I never said any such thing. I said only that during the training process, the instructor must evaluate all areas/tasks and determine that the trainee can perform them at least to the relevant PTS standards. If you know of a way to evaulate an applicant's ability to navigate XC by DR/pilotage that without doing a cross-country flight navigating by DR/pilotage, I'd like to hear it.Let's be very clear on the ridiculous claim/inference that you made and are now arguing. You claim/infer that a student (be it private or commercial) must complete EACH AND EVERY HOUR OF TRAINING TO THE PTS STANDARDS OR THE TIME DOESN'T COUNT TOWARDS THE AERONAUTICAL EXPERIENCE REQUIRED.
Another false accusation -- I never said that.IOW, according to you, if the student flies an hour of ground reference training but the student doesn't hold PTS standards for the entire hour then the hour doesn't count towards the aeronautical experience requirements, or at least according to you any portion of the hour not flown to PTS standards doesn't count.
Since I never said that, your statement is the one that is hogwash.That is indeed the ridiculous claim you have made. You stated that the commercial x-country aeronautical experience must be flown to commercial standards, as referenced in/by the PTS. Your claim is absolutely, totally, BS.
I never said that.That isn't the question--not even close. The question at hand is whether or not those bobbing and weaving hours count towards the aeronautical experience. You apparently claim it doesn't.
The entire flight? No, but I do say that achievement of performance of all PTS areas/tasks to at least the PTS standards must be achieved before the training is complete.According to you the flight must be flown to commercial PTS tolerances.
I agree, and I never said otherwise.The time counts regardless of how well it was flown.
You may be, but that is not what I was talking about. My point was merely to provide some insight into why the FAA wants those two dual XC's to be flown during commercial flight training, and why they want them flown using DR/pilotage.FWIW, the signatures on the 8710 and in the logbook state that the candidate is prepared to pass the test--but we aren't discussing being ready for the test--we are discussing the aeronautical experience requirements.
midlifeflyer said:We'll be back to this exciting eposide of "The Adventures of Captain Ron and Mr Ed" after a word from our sponsors.
Note that the latter two flights must be more than 2 hours as well as going more than 100nm from the original point of departure -- do it in a Bonanza or a twin and the time requirement may be more restrictive than the distance requirement.OnlyAnEgg said:Getting back to the original question, I think it has been established that the Commercial candidate must complete:
a) a SOLO x-c trip of more than 300 nm with three landings,
b) a night DUAL x-c training flight in VFR of more than 100 nm, and
c) a day DUAL x-c training flight in VFR of more than 100 nm