This question came up in another forum and I didn't have a good answer.
Do the required night cross country training flights (private or commercial) need to be done at night from takeoff to landing, or is it simple a flight in which 100 NM of night flight take place?
For clarity, here's the scenario. The student and CFI do a cross country. To keep it simple, it's an out and back from KAAA to KBBB, which is 70 NM away from KAAA.
The CFI and student take off before night. Halfway to KBBB, it becomes night. They land at KBBB, turn around and head home. The net result is 105 NM that was done at night.
But does it count? If the entire training flight, from takeoff to landing, needs to be done at night, then only the trip back would count. If, on the other hand, all that is required is that it be a cross country flight during which 100 NM is traveled at night, then at 1/2 of the trip outbound would also count to satisfying the requirement.
Personally, I can see it go either way, but is anyone aware of an FAA position on this, whether "official" or not.
Do the required night cross country training flights (private or commercial) need to be done at night from takeoff to landing, or is it simple a flight in which 100 NM of night flight take place?
For clarity, here's the scenario. The student and CFI do a cross country. To keep it simple, it's an out and back from KAAA to KBBB, which is 70 NM away from KAAA.
The CFI and student take off before night. Halfway to KBBB, it becomes night. They land at KBBB, turn around and head home. The net result is 105 NM that was done at night.
But does it count? If the entire training flight, from takeoff to landing, needs to be done at night, then only the trip back would count. If, on the other hand, all that is required is that it be a cross country flight during which 100 NM is traveled at night, then at 1/2 of the trip outbound would also count to satisfying the requirement.
Personally, I can see it go either way, but is anyone aware of an FAA position on this, whether "official" or not.