Pvt Pilot Training for Inst Rating. As many pilots starting their INST PILOT - AIRPLANE rating, need PIC Cross Country, 50 hrs, Post PVT (although the SOLO student cross country counts). THIS IS FOR INST RATNG.
This scenario is airport A, B, C.... Shape of a triangle. A>B 57nm (base of triangle W to E), B>C N to NW 45nm, C>A 39nm. ONLY TWO LANDINGS, B and A more than 50nm straight line. Airport C overflown (app to missed). Back to Airport A fill stop. TWO LANDINGS more than 50nm apart returning to departure airport.
DETAIL: Airport A to B is 57 miles straight East. Execute RNAV approach (no PT or course reversal) WITH T/G. Take off (missed approach). "Divert" to Airport C North West 46 nm, VOR approach, full PT, missed no landing. Return to departure airport A South West (triangle route) to RNAV LPV (vectors to IF segment), full stop, 40 nm Away C>A. (again no landing at C, two landings one at B and one at A which are 57nm apart).
For the record the DEFINITIONS PART 61.1, SPACIFICALLY CROSS COUNTRY IS IN 14CFR61.1 (b)(ii)
(A) Conducted in an appropriate aircraft;
(B) That includes a point of landing that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles* from the original point of departure; and
(C) That involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage, electronic navigation aids, radio aids, or other navigation systems to navigate to the landing point.
* Does not say fly time straight line. Slow planes takes longer than a fast plane.
Pilots mistake FAR's the so precise and comprehensive that everything is explicitly stated with no ambiguity. Sometimes FAR says THOU SHALL NOT... That is axiomatic.
The only opinion that counts is that of "Administrator" (FAA), an FAA Inspector, DPE, your airline/Chief pilot. I found nothing explicit, but I am sure Pilots of America will have a ton of opinions. I will be calling two DPE's and and my FSDO as well. Why. I make sure. If there is a doubt... I can't wait to see the thoughtful replies. To be clear, unless you are FAA or DPE... OR you have addressed this with FAA and DPE, I'd love to hear your finding and experience. If you must post your opinion guess speculation, please do. Up to you.
NOTE: Started Teaching in 1990 (CFI-II-M), then flew for airlines while part time instructing but few ratings (Flt Reviews, Transition Training, Hi-Perf). My INST students in the 90's came to me with over 100 hrs, cross country time, maturity. Now in 2020's I get students who barely passed PVT, not current with ZERO post PVT Check cross country or anytime. Now I incorporate +1.5 or +2hr flights into INST Training to give both dual, Sim Inst and Cross country. OK so be it. That is great but it also is why I am asking this LOG XC time question with non-direct routing. Not to mention holds. I RECOMMEND new private pilots, GO FLY after your rating. That time as PIC with no Instructor will help you. By all means make them XC's as well. Trust me. Fly for at last a year post Pvt. before INST RATING. I get the two birds one stone, but you need 250 hrs for COMMERCIAL. YOU NEED THE TIME if your goal is Professional Pilot. That was the INTENT of regulation to get PIC (not dual) Flight Experience VFR before INST RATING.
Again I 99% sure but I like to be 100% and want some definitive precedence. The DPE's in this neck of the woods bounce students for lack of XC occasionally (not mine). So I am sufficiently paranoid.
BONUS Question CGUMPS (acronym nonmonic) allowed by your DPE as a checklist (vs a hard copy) in hand? One DPE was fine with it. Again this is a simplex airplane fixed gear and prop. Again not looking for opinion but DPE experience yeah or yay.
This scenario is airport A, B, C.... Shape of a triangle. A>B 57nm (base of triangle W to E), B>C N to NW 45nm, C>A 39nm. ONLY TWO LANDINGS, B and A more than 50nm straight line. Airport C overflown (app to missed). Back to Airport A fill stop. TWO LANDINGS more than 50nm apart returning to departure airport.
DETAIL: Airport A to B is 57 miles straight East. Execute RNAV approach (no PT or course reversal) WITH T/G. Take off (missed approach). "Divert" to Airport C North West 46 nm, VOR approach, full PT, missed no landing. Return to departure airport A South West (triangle route) to RNAV LPV (vectors to IF segment), full stop, 40 nm Away C>A. (again no landing at C, two landings one at B and one at A which are 57nm apart).
For the record the DEFINITIONS PART 61.1, SPACIFICALLY CROSS COUNTRY IS IN 14CFR61.1 (b)(ii)
(A) Conducted in an appropriate aircraft;
(B) That includes a point of landing that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles* from the original point of departure; and
(C) That involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage, electronic navigation aids, radio aids, or other navigation systems to navigate to the landing point.
* Does not say fly time straight line. Slow planes takes longer than a fast plane.
Pilots mistake FAR's the so precise and comprehensive that everything is explicitly stated with no ambiguity. Sometimes FAR says THOU SHALL NOT... That is axiomatic.
The only opinion that counts is that of "Administrator" (FAA), an FAA Inspector, DPE, your airline/Chief pilot. I found nothing explicit, but I am sure Pilots of America will have a ton of opinions. I will be calling two DPE's and and my FSDO as well. Why. I make sure. If there is a doubt... I can't wait to see the thoughtful replies. To be clear, unless you are FAA or DPE... OR you have addressed this with FAA and DPE, I'd love to hear your finding and experience. If you must post your opinion guess speculation, please do. Up to you.
NOTE: Started Teaching in 1990 (CFI-II-M), then flew for airlines while part time instructing but few ratings (Flt Reviews, Transition Training, Hi-Perf). My INST students in the 90's came to me with over 100 hrs, cross country time, maturity. Now in 2020's I get students who barely passed PVT, not current with ZERO post PVT Check cross country or anytime. Now I incorporate +1.5 or +2hr flights into INST Training to give both dual, Sim Inst and Cross country. OK so be it. That is great but it also is why I am asking this LOG XC time question with non-direct routing. Not to mention holds. I RECOMMEND new private pilots, GO FLY after your rating. That time as PIC with no Instructor will help you. By all means make them XC's as well. Trust me. Fly for at last a year post Pvt. before INST RATING. I get the two birds one stone, but you need 250 hrs for COMMERCIAL. YOU NEED THE TIME if your goal is Professional Pilot. That was the INTENT of regulation to get PIC (not dual) Flight Experience VFR before INST RATING.
Again I 99% sure but I like to be 100% and want some definitive precedence. The DPE's in this neck of the woods bounce students for lack of XC occasionally (not mine). So I am sufficiently paranoid.
BONUS Question CGUMPS (acronym nonmonic) allowed by your DPE as a checklist (vs a hard copy) in hand? One DPE was fine with it. Again this is a simplex airplane fixed gear and prop. Again not looking for opinion but DPE experience yeah or yay.