RussR
En-Route
This was prompted by a post on askacfi.com, but the question isn't really relevant to that post. Plus, this is a better forum for discussions, whereas that forum is better for just answers.
My question (not really pertinent in any way, more of an academic question) is, "how much instrument training IN A HELICOPTER is an applicant for an Instrument-Helicopter rating required to have?"
This may sound a bit stupid, but 61.65 is a confusingly-written regulation in some ways.
A close reading of 61.65e (pertaining to helicopters, though the wording is similar for airplanes), shows that there are only three requirements that specifically need to be met in helicopters:
10 hours of helicopter XC as PIC
3 hours of training in the last two months in a helicopter.
A 100-nm training XC in a helicopter.
The rest are "total experience" type requirements, that can be met in any type of aircraft.
Notice that 61.65e(2) requires 40 hours of simulated instrument time, "of which 15 hours must have been with an authorized instructor who holds an instrument-helicopter rating".
A literal reading of this does NOT say that the 15 hours have to be in a helicopter, but just that they have to be with a CFI who is an instrument-helicopter instructor. It appears that doing the training in an airplane, but with a dual-rated CFI, would meet the letter of this regulation.
Notice that the wording in 61.65d, for airplanes, is identical (and 61.65f as well).
This seems like the type of thing that would have been brought up to the FAA Chief Counsel, but I searched the interpretations and didn't find anything.
So the way I read it, assuming an applicant already has the 10 XC PIC helicopter hours, then all that is required IN A HELICOPTER is 3 hours of instruction in the last two months, if that 3 hours includes the 100-nm XC. The rest of the training could be done in an airplane.
But this doesn't seem to make a lot of sense (not that the regulations always make sense, of course), so am I missing something?
My question (not really pertinent in any way, more of an academic question) is, "how much instrument training IN A HELICOPTER is an applicant for an Instrument-Helicopter rating required to have?"
This may sound a bit stupid, but 61.65 is a confusingly-written regulation in some ways.
A close reading of 61.65e (pertaining to helicopters, though the wording is similar for airplanes), shows that there are only three requirements that specifically need to be met in helicopters:
10 hours of helicopter XC as PIC
3 hours of training in the last two months in a helicopter.
A 100-nm training XC in a helicopter.
The rest are "total experience" type requirements, that can be met in any type of aircraft.
Notice that 61.65e(2) requires 40 hours of simulated instrument time, "of which 15 hours must have been with an authorized instructor who holds an instrument-helicopter rating".
A literal reading of this does NOT say that the 15 hours have to be in a helicopter, but just that they have to be with a CFI who is an instrument-helicopter instructor. It appears that doing the training in an airplane, but with a dual-rated CFI, would meet the letter of this regulation.
Notice that the wording in 61.65d, for airplanes, is identical (and 61.65f as well).
This seems like the type of thing that would have been brought up to the FAA Chief Counsel, but I searched the interpretations and didn't find anything.
So the way I read it, assuming an applicant already has the 10 XC PIC helicopter hours, then all that is required IN A HELICOPTER is 3 hours of instruction in the last two months, if that 3 hours includes the 100-nm XC. The rest of the training could be done in an airplane.
But this doesn't seem to make a lot of sense (not that the regulations always make sense, of course), so am I missing something?