I have a question regarding logging time with some friends of mine. I'm the only one with a high performance endorsement and were looking to take the 182T up this weekend. We will be flying IFR and I wanna do some time under the hood, can the person sitting in the right seat log time as SIC I'm 100% sure they can't log PIC correct? I'm really unfamiliar with SIC because I have never dealt with it. Part of me says they can and part of me says they can't, so can someone clarify for me?
So given my friends are IR they would be good to log SIC then?
One question: Are you instrument rated? It's not entirely clear from the question.
If the answer is no, then you can't do the flight under IFR at all: If you don't have an instrument rating, and your friends don't have high performance endorsements, then you have nobody who can legally act as PIC.
Now - Assuming you ARE instrument rated, I'll move on to the logging question. To clarify the situation, you are instrument rated and current, high performance endorsed, and legal to act as PIC in every other way and you will be acting as PIC for the flight. You're going to fly a 182 IFR and do some hood work.
One final assumption here is that you will be the only person flying the airplane, and not letting anyone else touch the controls?
On to the questions:
First of all, you're correct that they can't log PIC, but it has nothing to do with their lack of a high performance endorsement and everything to do with the fact that they're not actually flying the airplane.
Second of all, yes they can log SIC for the time you are under the hood, under FAR 61.51(f)(2):
FAR 61.51(f) said:
(f) Logging second-in-command flight time. A person may log second-in-command time only for that flight time during which that person:
(2) Holds the appropriate category, class, and instrument rating (if an instrument rating is required for the flight) for the aircraft being flown, and more than one pilot is required under the type certification of the aircraft or the regulations under which the flight is being conducted.
The "or" at the end of (f)(1) makes it irrelevant, so only (f)(2) needs to be satisfied. Since "the regulations under which the flight is being conducted," namely 91.109(b)(1) requires a safety pilot, two pilots are required and thus your friend can log SIC.
FAR 91.109(b) said:
b) No person may operate a civil aircraft in simulated instrument flight unless—
(1) The other control seat is occupied by a safety pilot who possesses at least a private pilot certificate with category and class ratings appropriate to the aircraft being flown.
Note also that this reg does NOT specify that the safety pilot be qualified to act as pilot in command, thus the safety pilot does not need a high performance endorsement, they simply need at least a Private Pilot certificate and Airplane Single Engine Land category and class.
Finally, the safety pilot DOES need a valid medical certificate (61.23(a)(3)(i)).
In review: You are at least a private pilot with ASEL and instrument rating, high performance endorsement, current medical certificate, with currency on instruments, flight review, and 90-day takeoffs and landings and you are qualified to act as PIC. You are also the sole manipulator of the flight controls. Your friend is private ASEL with instrument rating and current medical. You're flying IFR in a 182.
You will be the acting PIC and you can log the entire flight as PIC as sole manipulator of the controls under 61.51(e)(1)(i). Your friend can log SIC for the time you are under the hood under 61.51(f)(2).
(OK CFI's, how'd I do?)