Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 16,022
- Location
- DXO124009
- Display Name
Display name:
Light and Sporty Guy
Ok, to get this out of another thread...
Too late to never mind... :wink2:
First, if you are looking for the black and white, written down, this makes sense, regulation, you ain't gonna find it.
ButI think it's a legit question, so - my unegumaked guess at it:
The FAA gets nit picky if they think that someone is trying to operate as a commercial pilot without the commercial ticket. (protecting the public and all that.)
And, for years and years, people have tried to find ways around the rules.
For example: "I will let you fly my airplane for free all day long and build the hours you need - all you have to do is fly it with this banner attached. I'm not going to pay you so you don't need a commercial ticket."
As a result, the FAA gets weirder and weirder in their interpretations. For example: "logging time is compensation".
In the end, it gets down to intent and what/why did someone get the money. Or, more specifically, what the FAA thinks your intent is.
If some non- pilot had said, "Yo! Kimberley! I just rented the airplane so you can fly me up to my cottage." Then that's a violation. The intent is to have Ms. Kimberly "fly for hire."
On the other hand, if someone says "Happy Birthday Kimberley Ann" and she goes flying, then she is paying her pro-rata share. She is paying it out of the money that was given to her.
In the case at hand, someone gave her a gift. The gift was given so she COULD go flying, but not because she specifically did some flying for the gift giver.
Intent. (Or, again, what the FAA thinks is the intent.)
Now -
If I take a pilot for a ride in my airplane and let them be sole manipulator (which means they can log the time), do I have to make them pay? Or would making them pay constitute renting out my airplane which I can't do because it is experimental?
(c) A private pilot may not pay less than the pro rata share of the operating expenses of a flight with passengers, provided the expenses involve only fuel, oil, airport expenditures, or rental fees.
Yes, I still have doubt. I am wondering if there is any way that the FAA would consider using money deposited into a flying account to be a violation of (c) above, or the fact that the FAA considers flight time to be compensation if the pilot doesn't pay for it (can't find it in part 61... yet...). But I no longer care because it seems that my simple question, intended to increase my knowledge, has been blown out of proportion. Never mind.
<edited to add the section about flight time being compensation>
Too late to never mind... :wink2:
First, if you are looking for the black and white, written down, this makes sense, regulation, you ain't gonna find it.
ButI think it's a legit question, so - my unegumaked guess at it:
The FAA gets nit picky if they think that someone is trying to operate as a commercial pilot without the commercial ticket. (protecting the public and all that.)
And, for years and years, people have tried to find ways around the rules.
For example: "I will let you fly my airplane for free all day long and build the hours you need - all you have to do is fly it with this banner attached. I'm not going to pay you so you don't need a commercial ticket."
As a result, the FAA gets weirder and weirder in their interpretations. For example: "logging time is compensation".
In the end, it gets down to intent and what/why did someone get the money. Or, more specifically, what the FAA thinks your intent is.
If some non- pilot had said, "Yo! Kimberley! I just rented the airplane so you can fly me up to my cottage." Then that's a violation. The intent is to have Ms. Kimberly "fly for hire."
On the other hand, if someone says "Happy Birthday Kimberley Ann" and she goes flying, then she is paying her pro-rata share. She is paying it out of the money that was given to her.
In the case at hand, someone gave her a gift. The gift was given so she COULD go flying, but not because she specifically did some flying for the gift giver.
Intent. (Or, again, what the FAA thinks is the intent.)
Now -
If I take a pilot for a ride in my airplane and let them be sole manipulator (which means they can log the time), do I have to make them pay? Or would making them pay constitute renting out my airplane which I can't do because it is experimental?