jmpoplin
Pre-Flight
Does Night time count as Actual Instrument or Simulated Instrument time - or do you have to be in clouds/under the hood?
I know some folks that log night as actual over the desert...but they are desperate
FAR 61.51(g) said:Logging instrument time. (1) A person may log instrument time only for that flight time when the person operates the aircraft solely by reference to instruments under actual or simulated instrument flight conditions.
Pretty simple. If you cannot control the aircraft based on what's outside, and you're not wearing a view-limiting device, you can log actual instrument time. The Lake Michigan example is a good one - I gave a tour of downtown Chicago to a couple friends a few nights ago, and made the turn away from the city and towards the lake - Black meets black! But except for the wide-open spaces of the west, there are generally enough lights on the ground to figure out which way is up.
Night in and of itself does not count as either of those. There are situations where night VFR can actually be logged as actual instrument time, but you better damn well already be instrument rated and proficient if you are going to be out in that. Think NO stars, NO moonlight, NO ground reference, nothing.
What about instrument currency? If you are in a situation where you must fly by reference of the instruments only, doesn't that beg a requirement for an IFR clearance?
I know some folks that log night as actual over the desert...but they are desperate
I had about 5 miles (if that) vis over Lake Michigan last fall with an overcast above me. It was instrument conditions, worse than some actual IMC I've been in. Yeah, I logged it. Not because I was desperate, but because that's what it was.
If you don't got the skills, you be screwed. But I see no need for an IFR clearance (Assuming appropriate visibilty, cloud clearance for VMC).
I guess where I am struggling with this, is that if you have no outside reference (horizon, ground or airborne lights, moon, stars) isn't visibility zero? (How would you even judge visibility?) That would seem to be the only instance where you could credibly claim "actual instrument" conditions.
I guess where I am struggling with this, is that if you have no outside reference (horizon, ground or airborne lights, moon, stars) isn't visibility zero? (How would you even judge visibility?) That would seem to be the only instance where you could credibly claim "actual instrument" conditions.
Haze over water = absolutly no horizon at all - even if the visibility is several miles. I ended up crossing Lake Michigan once at just a few hundred feet to keep a good ground reference - there was plenty of visibility, but the water and haze just merged togeather to eliminate any sort of horizon. Down low was OK, because I could see the surface, but up any higher I would have been in trouble. (I didn't have the skills then, and I don't have them now.)