I generally don’t. If I fly someplace for lunch then back home, I log the flight there and back as a single flight.That's been my way of doing things. If I shut down, that's a completed flight and is logged on one line
I log that as two flights. My choice.I generally don’t. If I fly someplace for lunch then back home, I log the flight there and back as a single flight.
I wouldn’t, for example, log the 300nm “one cross country flight” required by 61.129 as two or three just because I stopped to refuel. Nothing wrong with doing it either way, although the one-line method works better with (most?) electronic logbooks if they are being used to meet requirements like this one.
See the link to the Sisk interpretation in post 33 above. Actually, don't just see it. Click the link and read the damn thing.
Nope. I do what the FAA says to do. My opinion on the FARs is not relevant. The facts are.
For private, instrument, and commercial, you need a landing at least 50nm away from the original point of departure. For ATP, you don't need a landing. For general logging purposes, any time you land at an airport different from the one you departed from is good, though I think this only matters when it comes to meeting Part 135 and Part 121 experience requirements.
But, we are talking about the same agency that has three different definitions of "night" too... And that's why my logbook has flights with night time but no night takeoffs or landings, and why I sometimes have to turn on all the lights on my airplane on a flight that only gets logged as Day.
I agree, my opinion doesn't matter. NEITHER DOES YOURS. The FAA's matters. The DPE's doesn't matter either, though getting into a ****ing match with a DPE isn't generally productive.
There's plenty of rulings in writing by the Administrator regarding logging cross country flight, and they don't all make sense, but they are the law and I'm not making them up. Let's look at a few:
1: You can legally log most of a triangle as XC even if you never go 50nm away from the first airport, if you just choose what to log on one line creatively. Van Zanen 2009 Glenn 2009
2: You can log XC even if you never make a 50nm leg, as long as there's at least one landing at least 50nm away from the original point of departure. Sisk 2008
3: You can log XC and PIC as a non-instrument-rated pilot when doing XC training flights for your IR. Haralson 2009
4: You canNOT log XC even if you are the acting PIC of a flight that would otherwise be XC unless two pilots are required for the entire flight. Gebhart 2009 Glenn 2009
5: You canNOT log XC of a flight no matter how long the distance is unless you are the one conducting the entire flight. Hilliard 2009
You're free to NOT log anything you don't want to log, as long as you are able to demonstrate that you have the necessary experience for any ratings, and currency for any flight operations you choose to undertake. However, you seem to have quite a fixation on not letting other people log things they want to log in a perfectly legal fashion for some reason.
If you think reading the FAA's own interpretations is a "Jedi Mind Trick" you're going to be amazed when I show you my garage door opener.
With all that experience, you must be trying really hard to be this wrong. Your opinion does not matter. Only the FAA's does.
You're actually 100% wrong, and, if you're serious about all this, my opinion is you're due for a 709 ride.I am 100% RIGHT in my conservative application of the REG in logging XC for INST RATING and my opinions are mine (like how to log XC in your log book) based on personally getting 9 FAA pilot and instructor certificates, 4 types and teaching both GA pilots to earn their PVT, INST, COM, MULTI, CFI ratings, and also teaching Airline Pilots for over 3 decades
What about a triangle, 50nm, 30 and 30? Are you saying that's only one XC between the 50nm pair?I will have my students log the following for their INST RATING
All airport pairs will be 50NM or more apart to log as XC.Log each XC leg on separate lines, is best.
Why then vs the other example. Cite a referenceIf just a pair, one line is OK if both legs XC.
Because?If you mix non XC (less then 50nm say for example positioning flight) with XC legs DO LOG on separate lines.
Huh?Position flights are fine, say a short 18 nm flight to nearby airport to START your XC, but the short leg(s) are not XC. Make separate line entry.
Thanks for allowing all of us to do that.Once you get your rating PVT and seek no Adv rating, log as you like, every flight is XC, even T/G's at home base if you like. Don't care.
I recall someone said hopscotching between airports, landing less than 50nm each time is cross country if you "eventually get there". Hard No! I don't know if it is the hubris of youth, inexperience or anti authority attitude? For sure you love to argue.
Why bother? He is either a troll or honestly believes he is right. Giving him the benefit of the doubt, the problem is that, like most beliefs, it automatically rejects any contrary information.You claim to want us to provide references, but when we do, you choose to ignore them. You clearly didn't read the FAA's own letter I posted a link to in Post 33. So I'll link it again:
https://www.faa.gov/sites/faa.gov/files/faa_migrate/interps/2008/Sisk_2008_Legal_Interpretation.pdf
You'll note it says EXACTLY what I and others have been saying. It comes direct from the FAA, and is a valid, legal reference.
But I notice that you choose to not recognize its existence at all, when it literally discusses the exact scenario here.
As my BIL says about my wife’s ex…if he believed he was the Queen of England, all the evidence would support that in his mind.Why bother? He is either a troll or honestly believes he is right. Giving him the benefit of the doubt, the problem is that, like most beliefs, it automatically rejects any contrary information.
Why bother? He is either a troll or honestly believes he is right. Giving him the benefit of the doubt, the problem is that, like most beliefs, it automatically rejects any contrary information.
Alright, lissten up, rookies. If you're seriously thinkin' about logging cross-country flights, you'v got alot to learn. But lucky for you, I'm here. Been flyin' for decades, know it all. No one does it better than me, so pay attenttion. Got my licens before you were born probably.
First off, logging cross-country. Piece of cake. Just need to know a few tricks. Doesn't matter what the FAA says. They make rules, but rules are for other people. Not me. I'm the excepption. Always have been.
So, cross-country flights. What's the big deal? Over 50 nautical miles from your home base. That's it. Doesn't matter if you don't *really* go that far. Just say you did. Who's checkin'? Nobody. Trust me on this one. Logged so many fake cross-country flights, and guess what? Still here. Still flyin'.
Now, let's talk about loggin it. Simple. Just write it in your logbook. No need to be precise. Round up. Flew 48 miles? Call it 55. Who's gonna know? Your instructor? They don't care. They're just happy your paying them. Theyre not gonna measure your flights. Besides, you flew all that way, what's a couple extra miles?
**Use pencill**. Erasable. If you get called out, change it. No big deal. Say it was a mistake. Blame the GPS. Those things are never right. All the technology today? Junk. Back in my day, we flew by the seat of our pants and look where we are now. Still here. Still the best.
**Cross-country reqquirements for your license? Overated**. Who needs 'em? Just show 'em your logbook. They'll sign you off. If they don't, find another instructor. Plenty of 'em out there. Everyone's got a price. Trust me, I know. Got my instrument rating in a weekend. Cash talks, my friends.
And the FAA inspectors? Bunch of **bureaucrrats**. Never even flown a real plane. They're just paper pushers. Don't let 'em scare you. Stand your ground. Confuse 'em with jargon. They don't know half of what we do. Guaranteed. Throw some big words at them. They'll back off. Works every time.
Oh, and don't worry about night flights. Who flies at night? Ridiculous. Can't see anything. Dangerous. Log it as day. Nobody cares. I mean, come on. Night flight requirments? Insane. Dangerous. Should be outlawed.
Fuel logs? Forget 'em. Just write down whatever. Who checks fuel logs? Waste of time. The plane flew, didn't it? That's all that matters. The plane and you got back in one piece. That's succes in my book.
And these newbie pilots with their tablets and apps. Ridiculous. Learn to fly like a real pilot. Use a map. A real map. Not some screen. Screens fail. Maps don't. I've got maps older than most of you. Still work.
Oh, and weather briefings. Waste of time. Look out the window. That's your weather briefing. If it looks good, go. If not, don't. Simple. No need for fancy briefings. Just another way for them to take your money.
To sum up, logging cross-country flights. Easy. No need to follow every little rule. Make it up as you go. Round up your miles, use pencill, bribe your instructors, confuse the FAA, ignore night flights, forget fuel logs, and throw out those tablets. Fly like a real pilot. Like me.
Remember, there's pilots and then there's **real** pilots. Be a real pilot. Like me. Best there ever was.
I tried that prompt in Gemini and got an anti-GPS rantI have a rebuttal:
ChatGPT, Generate a 500 word forum post about logging of cross-country flights in the voice of an arrogant airline pilot and flight instructor who is generally wrong about everything. Use mostly incomplete sentences and incorrect grammar. Use bold and italics randomly for emphasis.
Why do you expect us to waste our time trying to read your functionally illiterate rants?You have made several incorrect and misleading statements. The REGS and INTENT of XC are clear. Adding words or making up appeal to authority logical fallacies', FAA SAYS SO, with no Ref, is wrong. I talked to the FAA and DPE. Over flight of airport to fly an approach to missed approach (not landing is OK) on an XC between two airports 50 nm apart or more. This was ans long ago. Why are you still arguing? I don't care, do as you like.
I will have my students log the following for their INST RATING
All airport pairs will be 50NM or more apart to log as XC.Log each XC leg on separate lines, is best. If just a pair, one line is OK if both legs XC.If you mix non XC (less then 50nm say for example positioning flight) with XC legs DO LOG on separate lines.Position flights are fine, say a short 18 nm flight to nearby airport to START your XC, but the short leg(s) are not XC. Make separate line entry.Once you get your rating PVT and seek no Adv rating, log as you like, every flight is XC, even T/G's at home base if you like. Don't care.
All your "interpretations", inserting words and your wishes and dreams of what you want is a rookie mistake. The one who counts is the Administrator (FAA) and their designees, DPE. To say "FAA SAYS SO" with no REFERENCE, in writing, is a red herring, strawman and non sequitur. I deny your self appointed authority. I went to the source.
The DEFINITION of and Rating Requirement for CROSS COUNTRY is in black and white. READ IT as it is and follow the strict interpterion and more over INETENT. The intent of Cross Country is Flight Planning, NAV, COM, Weather, landing and takeoff at new airports. I recalled someone argued T/G's are XC? Ha ha. I recall someone said hopscotching between airports, landing less than 50nm each time is cross country if you "eventually get there". Hard No! I don't know if it is the hubris of youth, inexperience or anti authority attitude? For sure you love to argue.
I am fine and my question about overflight (not landing) and doing an approach half way between a 50 nm XC pair is OK. Why? It meets the INTENT and LETTER of the LAW. The word STRAIGHT LINE distance doesn't mean you must fly straight flight path. I was 99.9% sure but ASKED other pilots who may have got input from DPE and FAA on overflight. Not really interested in your personal opinion. However circling for 2 hours may be OK by Reg but violation of INTENT, unless you are holding in actual IMC by ATC request. For training, assume 1 min leg, 5 circuits of the hold is 20 min. That is enough. You all seem to think INTENT means nothing. CORSS COUINTRY is in 61.1 definition. If you are not doing that, you are not following the INTENT. It is to build experience not pad your log book with meaningless time.
Fun fact 29 yrs flying as commercial airline pilot domestic and international I have only had to hold a handful of times. Every time was JFK and once I had to divert to Hartford CT. My student is getting random holds now which is a challenge without autopilot as it takes some button pushing and knob twirling on the "navigator". Going old school dial up VOR and use TSO196 GPS as DME or cross radial, is always a skill one should have. Programing the Garmin GNS430W is a handful for new students, as this plane is not TAA, some glass but no autopilot.
To close this out, I don't know why you feel a need to argue ad nauseum being so pedantic and petulant to convince me of something? Is it a hobby? I have NO clue at this point what you are talking about, because you have gone to the 3rd level of internet forum hell arguing about arguing. My question (which I already was 99.9% sure to start with) was answered long ago. I asked specifically for pilots who talked to FAA or DPE about this specific scenario. I got lots of opinions, some very wrong. That is OK. You do you.
I only reply because I don't want others to be mislead. I am 100% RIGHT in my conservative application of the REG in logging XC for INST RATING and my opinions are mine (like how to log XC in your log book) based on REGS and talking to FAA and DPE. Don't over think it. My back ground 9 FAA pilot and instructor certificates, 4 types and teaching both GA pilots (over 20 ratings completed) and Airline Pilots for over 3 decades might give me insight? That is not the only reason why I am right, my high time and many ratings, but it does give me perspective. I am conservative and want ZERO chance a DPE will deny logged time required for a rating. Sue me.
If there is a liberal interpretation that is OK with you and a DPE, go for it. Not going for any Adv ratings ever? Log T/G's at home airport as XC if you like. I and my students will pass on that and use the 50nm straight line distance and practicing XC skills as defined in Part 61.1 to not only LOG TIME but gain skills, experience and proficiency. As a professional instructor I don't bore holes in sky and waste ink. It has a purpose, INTENT. You arguing has no purposes. Accept you are not the boas of me. Ha ha. I am good. Bye.
I find it interesting that he continues to post here…I guess he just needs validation to feel that he’s he only one who’s correct.Why do you expect us to waste our time trying to read your functionally illiterate rants?
Microsoft > GoogleI tried that prompt in Gemini and got an anti-GPS rant
I can nearly guarantee it's a troll.Call it a character flaw , I wanted to make sure anybody reading this abysmal thread in the future doesn't think he's right, despite his assertions that he is 100% correct.
Although if he's a troll, he's a pretty long-winded one.
Prove one wrong, with references.You have made several incorrect and misleading statements.
To the rest of us, yes. They must not be very clear to you since you get them so wrong.The REGS and INTENT of XC are clear.
Except I did provide references. You just ignored them.Adding words or making up appeal to authority logical fallacies', FAA SAYS SO, with no Ref, is wrong.
Not landing is only OK for ATP.I talked to the FAA and DPE. Over flight of airport to fly an approach to missed approach (not landing is OK) on an XC between two airports 50 nm apart or more.
So if you fly from Seattle to Miami but never fly a leg over 50nm, it's not cross country?All airport pairs will be 50NM or more apart to log as XC.
And yet you think everyone ELSE on the board is wrong. All righty then.Once you get your rating PVT and seek no Adv rating, log as you like, every flight is XC, even T/G's at home base if you like.
Just because you didn't read the references, doesn't mean I didn't provide them.To say "FAA SAYS SO" with no REFERENCE, in writing, is a red herring, strawman and non sequitur.
The DEFINITION of and Rating Requirement for CROSS COUNTRY is in black and white. READ IT as it is and follow the strict interpterion and more over INETENT. The intent of Cross Country is Flight Planning, NAV, COM, Weather, landing and takeoff at new airports. I recalled someone argued T/G's are XC? Ha ha. I recall someone said hopscotching between airports, landing less than 50nm each time is cross country if you "eventually get there". Hard No! I don't know if it is the hubris of youth, inexperience or anti authority attitude? For sure you love to argue.
I look forward to chatting with you. We're in the big hangar next to the tower.I am going to Oshkosh for whole week and I will ask the FAA.
You forgot, “…and we’re here to help you.”I look forward to chatting with you. We're in the big hangar next to the tower.
Your personal opinion is my First Commandment of Flight Instruction:As my personal opinion only, as a flight instructor I'm generally loathe to "require" my learners to do it "my way" just because I "like it." I may recommend certain techniques, but if it's not a matter of regulation, policy, or safety, if they want to do it a different way, so long as it's not a bad habit or going to cause problems in the future, that's okay with me.
I had a Chief Pilot years ago who decided I needed to change the way I did my mag checks because he thought the way I did it was more likely to result in taking off on one mag. I never took off on one mag (before or after that,) but I can’t count the number of times I almost shut the engine down on the mag check while I was trying to do it his way. What saved me was actually the part of my mag check that he apparently didn’t do-watch for the rise in RPM going back to BOTH.Your personal opinion is my First Commandment of Flight Instruction:
Thou shalt not try to change someone's technique that works just because you like another better.I was a victim of a violation of that commandment shortly after I got my instrument rating. Screwed me up for years. It took getting my CFII to overcome it.
I bet a number of us have stories like ours.I had a Chief Pilot years ago who decided I needed to change the way I did my mag checks because he thought the way I did it was more likely to result in taking off on one mag. I never took off on one mag (before or after that,) but I can’t count the number of times I almost shut the engine down on the mag check while I was trying to do it his way. What saved me was actually the part of my mag check that he apparently didn’t do-watch for the rise in RPM going back to BOTH.
Yup…and do the same thing with the same pilot every time, because they’ve “never seen that before.”All I do with someone who loads VTF is create a scenario where it causes a problem. Pilot solves the problem, I'm very happy. Pilot gets stuck, we discuss alternatives, including how to handle it if they want to continue to load the VTF transition.
Nah. I have a list of real-world GPS tasks pilots have trouble with, and if it's a repeat customer, my notes usually tell me which I've done (on purpose) with them already. If it's a "get stuck," I'll may do it again or a variation or ground question to check, but the "get stuck" is often enough of a memory link for the lesson to stick. Otherwise, it may or may not come up in the ordinary course.Yup…and do the same thing with the same pilot every time, because they’ve “never seen that before.”