dmccormack
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- May 11, 2007
- Messages
- 10,945
- Location
- Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
- Display Name
Display name:
Dan Mc
Wait - you previously quoted AOPA saying IMC (as defined in 170.3) was required to log actual instrument time. Then you provided the final word on the subject, from the FAA, which clearly states that that you CAN log actual without being in IMC as defined by FAR 170.3 (which was my point, wasn't it)? I'll grant that the conditions that allow that are rare, and in the subjective judgment of the pilot, but they do exist.
A pilot CAN log Actual Instrument Time without being in a cloud, without being in less than VFR weather. That's all I've ever said. Not that it was smart, not that I encouraged it, but that it could be done in compliance with regulations.
Dan, I am attacking your logic here, not your underlying opinion that flying on instruments without being rated is risky and should be discouraged... So please don't take this at all personally - next time I'm up around AGC on an Angel flight I'd like to buy you lunch and show you I'm not a rabid ****head, just an engineer.
Best wishes,
No problem -- hopefully I'm coming across cordially. AGC is nearby, though FWQ is mostly the home port (and has a restaurant!)
I just adamant about the whole VFR into IMC thing...
I found the FAA Chief Counsel ruling after I posted the AOPA quote -- but I think the two are not so far apart.
The key element is that the pilot would need to substantiate his/her claim of "actual."
The rub is that a non IR pilot with more than a tiny bit (I used the term minuscule earlier) of IMC in his/her logbook is going to be under some serious scrutiny -- either you shouldn't have logged that flight over some misty mountains as actual or you were guilty of recklessness in flying IMC those times you claimed.
So -- back to my initial point -- I think the logging of solo IMC flight time -- though perhaps legal (and again, the FAA says it is "subjective" -- so guess who decides?) -- should be done very carefully, and in very limited amounts by non instrument rated pilots.