Personally I’m not thinking much of anything would jump out at an examiner. Ryan expressed reservations about it being a good idea, but I can’t imagine that would have a significant effect on what happens when an applicant shows up for a checkride.
Brad-
Sorry, got a little busy with work but to answer your questions:
1. I only have about 5 hours solo so far.
2. 0 solo cross country (but 15.7 total dual cross country)
3. Longest solo so far was 1.6 hours (practiced a bunch of maneuvers and flew to another airport about 20 miles away to do touch and goes)
4. I started my training on April 20th this year and as of today I have 45.1 hours total
5. 28.1 hours in a Cherokee 140 and 17.0 hours in the Cherokee 6/260
Also, I will be flying from Bakersfield (L45) to Corona (KAJO) tomorrow with a different instructor (I flew with him once, on my stage check before my first solo) My instructor wanted me to fly the route once with an instructor before doing it solo (because the airspace in So Cal is quite busy). Then my instructor will pick me up Sunday and we will fly back. We are also working on all the maneuvers and emergency's that I already had down in the 140 in my new plane (that's what we did today along with landings). Next week we will get in all the rest of the night flying, more maneuvers and emergency's. The following week we will be doing more hood time and solos. The last week before my trip will be more solo, check ride prep and, if it works out, my check ride, if not just some more soloing. Also, each weekend during this training I am hoping to fly from Bakersfield to Corona. Luckily, we usually have really good weather this time of year.
I apologize for scaring off the OP.
IDK if the OP is still around... Didn't sound like fiction to me, kind of a real-ish scenario. But if he is still listening -- that sounds like a bad idea for your own safety.Brad-
Sorry, got a little busy with work but to answer your questions:
1. I only have about 5 hours solo so far.
2. 0 solo cross country (but 15.7 total dual cross country)
3. Longest solo so far was 1.6 hours (practiced a bunch of maneuvers and flew to another airport about 20 miles away to do touch and goes)
4. I started my training on April 20th this year and as of today I have 45.1 hours total
5. 28.1 hours in a Cherokee 140 and 17.0 hours in the Cherokee 6/260
Also, I will be flying from Bakersfield (L45) to Corona (KAJO) tomorrow with a different instructor (I flew with him once, on my stage check before my first solo) My instructor wanted me to fly the route once with an instructor before doing it solo (because the airspace in So Cal is quite busy). Then my instructor will pick me up Sunday and we will fly back. We are also working on all the maneuvers and emergency's that I already had down in the 140 in my new plane (that's what we did today along with landings). Next week we will get in all the rest of the night flying, more maneuvers and emergency's. The following week we will be doing more hood time and solos. The last week before my trip will be more solo, check ride prep and, if it works out, my check ride, if not just some more soloing. Also, each weekend during this training I am hoping to fly from Bakersfield to Corona. Luckily, we usually have really good weather this time of year.
§ 61.89 (General Limitations) says a student pilot may not act as pilot in command of an aircraft in furtherance of a business.
Now I understand that golf is not necessarily business, but I've interpreted this regulation as saying that training flights should be for the purpose of training, i.e. to gain the aeronautical experience required for the practical test. That doesn't mean that a student is not allowed to do something fun while on the ground during a cross country flight, but the purpose of the flight is flight training, not the fun activity on the ground. In this case, it sounds more like the gold outing started the whole thing, and the solo cross country comes later. I would not sign this off as a CFI.
- Martin
Unless he plays on the PGA I don't see how a golf outing with his buddies is in the furtherance of a business. When I have students with their own plane, I sign em off for all sort of fun trips. Was even going to sign one off on an overnight, but weather put the kibosh on that. We were to go over the flight plan on the phone with them sending me pictures of their flight plan, and me taking a picture of the endorsement and sending it back to them.
He did not call it a business. His point was "In this case, it sounds more like the gold outing started the whole thing, and the solo cross country comes later."
Uncle Martin is the voice of reason. I wouldn't question it.
100% agreed.No CFI is unquestionable - myself and Martin included. We aren't gods, nor should we be treated as such.
I was supposed to fly a solo cross country last week in my plane for the first time but we both felt it was pushing it and I wasn't quite ready so it didn't happen until this week.
So you've only now just done one solo X Country?
IMHO - no, please don't fly to your golf vacation.
Finish your PPL training first.
Probably the same as it would be for any solo flight in the airplane.What would the insurance company’s POV be on this?
Unless something happens and they claim this wasn’t a student pilot solo but a golf vacation flight that he wasn’t rated to fly. You know how they can get.Probably the same as it would be for any solo flight in the airplane.
Unless something happens and they claim this wasn’t a student pilot solo but a golf vacation flight that he wasn’t rated to fly. You know how they can get.
After two claims of my own, it sounds like I don’t know how they can get.Unless something happens and they claim this wasn’t a student pilot solo but a golf vacation flight that he wasn’t rated to fly. You know how they can get.
Why would he need to call them for this if they’ve already said he can train and fly solo in it?Hey, I could be wrong. Maybe he can just call his insurance company and tell them what he's going to do and get the definitive word on it.
My experience is the insurance companies trust authorized flight instructors to do their jobs. Every time I’ve tried to get guidance as an instructor from an insurance company, whatever I decided was right would be fine with them.They might say that what he’s about to do isn’t a student doing a solo but a guy flying where and when he shouldn’t. But yes, you think that this is a legitimate student solo and any insurance company would be just fine with it. I hear your POV.
They might say that what he’s about to do isn’t a student doing a solo but a guy flying where and when he shouldn’t.
My experience is the insurance companies trust authorized flight instructors to do their jobs. Every time I’ve tried to get guidance as an instructor from an insurance company, whatever I decided was right would be fine with them.
I’ve also never seen an insurance company go out of their way to not pay a claim.
Nothing there that suggests it can’t be done.Ask your CFI how 61.195(d)(2) will be complied with.
That I’ll agree with…which is why we don’t have health insurance.
Man I dont know about aviation insurance but I am pursuing a career into aviation from the medical field mostly because of the insurance companies. They deny deny deny every claim they could for all kinds of BS reasons.
Is there a separate golf rating now? “Airplane Single Engine Land Golf?”