There's no requirement that the instructor be PIC.You’re not PIC, you’re not giving loggable instruction… I see no problems.
And if the doctor gives the rep a few bucks, who cares? If another pilot gives me instruction on how to use my avionics, I’m obliged to at least pay for their meal and maybe a little extra because it was worth it to me. I really don’t see an issue hereA medical device rep is not a doctor but they show doctors how to use devices during surgery...
They have to find you first.And if the doctor gives the rep a few bucks, who cares? If another pilot gives me instruction on how to use my avionics, I’m obliged to at least pay for their meal and maybe a little extra because it was worth it to me. I really don’t see an issue here
If he was PIC, and making money while flying, kinda becomes a commercial operation… that’s all.There's no requirement that the instructor be PIC.
I would imagine I could give a seminar on how to use Garmin Pilot on the ground. Not signing a logbook, just showing how to use it. You pay me, no issue. Now we do the same in a plane - is it any different?
B. What if the “instructor” provides the plane?Nope. I don't see any difference. You're not being paid to fly, merely to explain how many menus and button clicks are necessary to do the simplest things because some idiot programmer didn't understand the necessity of a simple UI when the user is busy flying an airplane and therefore......
But I digress.
The avionics instructor isn't being paid to fly and the pilot is paying more than a pro rata share of the flight cost. LEGAL.
I can see arguments, but I think it would still be legal, though I recommend paying cash at midnight in a dark alley and not making any logbook entry of the flight, just in case.
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On that topic, I've come across many DPE's who will only accept cash. I wonder why. I don't know many people who walk around with $800 of cash in their wallet.
Does knowing how to use the equipment "count for something"?Instruction that counts for something has to be done by an authorized instructor.
Instruction that counts for something has to be signed off by that instructor in the student's logbook.
Stopped beating around the bush. Are you trying to offer a service and want to know if it’s legal, or do you think you got screwed by someone offering a service. Just say it!
Instruction that counts for something has to be signed off by that instructor in the student's logbook.
None of the above. Just BS'ing around the hangar and someone raised the question.Stopped beating around the bush. Are you trying to offer a service and want to know if it’s legal, or do you think you got screwed by someone offering a service. Just say it!
Pretty much. The specific scenario was the buyer of a plane wanting training on the equipment and the seller not wanting to do it for free.So was the question about a non-CFI that happens to be a SME on a particular set of avionics that goes flying with a friend, that may or may not offer cash, food, or booze as compensation?
Pretty much. The specific scenario was the buyer of a plane wanting training on the equipment and the seller not wanting to do it for free.
Is it legal to accept payment for training if you don't sign a log book?
Sounds like the seller needs to recommend a CFI…for reasons totally unrelated to the topic of the thread.Pretty much. The specific scenario was the buyer of a plane wanting training on the equipment and the seller not wanting to do it for free.
Up the sale price by $200Pretty much. The specific scenario was the buyer of a plane wanting training on the equipment and the seller not wanting to do it for free.
Thank you!Pretty much. The specific scenario was the buyer of a plane wanting training on the equipment and the seller not wanting to do it for free.
You forgot to use a dead drop. Key step.I can see arguments, but I think it would still be legal, though I recommend paying cash at midnight in a dark alley and not making any logbook entry of the flight, just in case.
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So it was hearing the caterpillar drive on the Red October and calling it whale sounds?Ultimately, it was found that the GPS was having an integration issue and we had to take the aircraft into an experimental category for Garmin to install some sensors to figure out what was going on. Come to find out there was an issue in the coding and the GPS kept reverting to Olathe, KS anytime it was "outside" a certain geo fence.
Ultimately, it was found that the GPS was having an integration issue and we had to take the aircraft into an experimental category for Garmin to install some sensors to figure out what was going on. Come to find out there was an issue in the coding and the GPS kept reverting to Olathe, KS anytime it was "outside" a certain geo fence.
I'm sympathetic to the monumental integration issues that might arise, but reverting to Olathe KS is clearly a kludge that should have never been written.Sounds like Garmin's verification testing left a lot to be desired. I presume they fired the SW person, who then went to work for Boeing?
I'm sympathetic to the monumental integration issues that might arise, but reverting to Olathe KS is clearly a kludge that should have never been written.
Kind of like Foreflight defaulting to Oshkosh.
Unfortunately, knowing software engineers as I do, it'd probably be the local LockMart plant.Imagine if LockMart had a cruise missile that reverted to Washington, DC....
(Come to think of it, not such a bad idea!)
Unfortunately, knowing software engineers as I do, it'd probably be the local LockMart plant.