BrianR
Pre-takeoff checklist
I know this topic is beat to death here, but it seems the issues surrounding logging vs acting PIC just don't die.
It's well-accepted here, and on all the aviation forums, that when a rated pilot is training for a new endorsement (let's say, high performance or complex, for purposes of this discussion) with a CFI, he/she is entitled to log PIC as long as you're doing the training in the appropriate class/category for which you're rated, and you're the sole manipulator.
But...each and every local CFI with which I've discussed this issue (probably three or four of them) disagree. These are all knowledgeable, intelligent folks, all actively instructing. They all regurgitate some belief that a pilot isn't appropriately "rated" for the airplane if you don't already hold the necessary endorsement.
I again encountered this when recently doing my first Mooney flight for the complex endorsement. After the flight, I filled out my logbook and handed it to the new-to-me CFI for his signature and the comments he wished to enter. "Ummm, you can't log this as PIC." I asked why he thought that was the case. He replied with a version of the above. I told him I disagreed, and referenced 14 CFR 61.51(e)(1)(i). He still argued the point. I said, "So if you are giving instrument instruction to me in a Cessna 172, would you claim that I could not log PIC because I am not yet instrument rated?" He thought about it, and agreed that in that scenario, I could log PIC. So I asked, "What is the difference between the two scenarios?"
He then said he thought it is "...FSDO specific. It is open to interpretation." I said no it isn't, it's in the FARs, black and white. He then asked me if I knew of any general counsel opinions on the topic, which I did not. Are there any, of which anyone is aware? (Yeah, yeah, I could go search...but if it exists, someone here will know.)
To my thinking, it doesn't rise to the level of needing a general counsel interpretation, because it's clear as written. If this was one rogue CFI, i wouldn't waste my time, but as I noted, it is an extremely common perception, at least in my neck of the woods.
Of course, it's not that big of a deal, because even if I can't convince him he's wrong, I'll just go back and add in the PIC time after I finish the endorsement training. But now it's irritating me, and I have a point to prove...
It's well-accepted here, and on all the aviation forums, that when a rated pilot is training for a new endorsement (let's say, high performance or complex, for purposes of this discussion) with a CFI, he/she is entitled to log PIC as long as you're doing the training in the appropriate class/category for which you're rated, and you're the sole manipulator.
But...each and every local CFI with which I've discussed this issue (probably three or four of them) disagree. These are all knowledgeable, intelligent folks, all actively instructing. They all regurgitate some belief that a pilot isn't appropriately "rated" for the airplane if you don't already hold the necessary endorsement.
I again encountered this when recently doing my first Mooney flight for the complex endorsement. After the flight, I filled out my logbook and handed it to the new-to-me CFI for his signature and the comments he wished to enter. "Ummm, you can't log this as PIC." I asked why he thought that was the case. He replied with a version of the above. I told him I disagreed, and referenced 14 CFR 61.51(e)(1)(i). He still argued the point. I said, "So if you are giving instrument instruction to me in a Cessna 172, would you claim that I could not log PIC because I am not yet instrument rated?" He thought about it, and agreed that in that scenario, I could log PIC. So I asked, "What is the difference between the two scenarios?"
He then said he thought it is "...FSDO specific. It is open to interpretation." I said no it isn't, it's in the FARs, black and white. He then asked me if I knew of any general counsel opinions on the topic, which I did not. Are there any, of which anyone is aware? (Yeah, yeah, I could go search...but if it exists, someone here will know.)
To my thinking, it doesn't rise to the level of needing a general counsel interpretation, because it's clear as written. If this was one rogue CFI, i wouldn't waste my time, but as I noted, it is an extremely common perception, at least in my neck of the woods.
Of course, it's not that big of a deal, because even if I can't convince him he's wrong, I'll just go back and add in the PIC time after I finish the endorsement training. But now it's irritating me, and I have a point to prove...