Hey @EricBe , thought this was weird. Says KDTO last visited in 2004, but then it lists my flights there this year when clicking on "View flights"
Interesting. And since our training flight on 7/1 ended up landing at KDTO with someone else at the controls, it's like I was never there.In case you saw my previous reply about "contact me", I realized what the issue was; read my edited reply above.
I was wondering why you were a bit faded and fuzzy on the edges during dinner.Interesting. And since our training flight on 7/1 ended up landing at KDTO with someone else at the controls, it's like I was never there.
There’s a ? note next to the Time accounting issues check: “In much of the world (but NOT the US), Total=PIC+SIC+Dual. This checks for scenarios where this equation doesn't hold” Thus if you’re in the US, you would NOT include this in your Check Flights report.I have a question about the "check flights" feature.
My training flights since I got my private I usually log PIC as well as Dual, but they are showing up with "Total time does not equal PIC + SIC + Dual time". Seems it's adding PIC and Dual together. Makes sense for flights when you aren't legally able to log PIC, but in many scenarios it is appropriate. I suppose this could be a case of "it's not an error, just ignore it if it makes sense"?
There’s a ? note next to the Time accounting issues check: “In much of the world (but NOT the US), Total=PIC+SIC+Dual. This checks for scenarios where this equation doesn't hold” Thus if you’re in the US, you would NOT include this in your Check Flights report.
If you're sole manipulator of the controls and rated in category and class, then you can log PIC. If you didn't have your private yet, then you can't log PIC when he's in the plane with you. But for endorsements and advanced ratings, you can log PIC while taking dual instruction.I mistakenly put PIC in my FF digital logbook when getting instruction, then sent a “signature request” to my instructor and he told me I am not PIC when getting instruction. I amended it and resent.
(e) Logging pilot-in-command flight time.
(1) A sport, recreational, private, commercial, or airline transport pilot may log pilot in command flight timefor flights-
(i) Except when logging flight time under § 61.159(c), when the pilot is the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft for which the pilot is rated, or has sport pilot privileges for that category and class of aircraft, if the aircraft class rating is appropriate;
I mistakenly put PIC in my FF digital logbook when getting instruction, then sent a “signature request” to my instructor and he told me I am not PIC when getting instruction. I amended it and resent.
Were you still operating on a Student Pilot Certificate?
Yep, the discussion above mirrors my understanding of things. In the US, as Salty correctly cites 61.51, if you are rated and you are manipulator of the controls, you're good to log PIC, even while simultaneously receiving Dual. E.g., I logged PIC and Dual for all of my instrument training because I was rated for the aircraft and I was the sole manipulator. But other jurisdictions don't distinguish "legal PIC" from "manipulator of the controls". The instructor is the one responsible for the safety of the flight, so they are PIC, and there can only (in these jurisdictions) ever be one PIC. So in those scenarios, you're EITHER PIC OR you're receiving dual, but not both.
MyFlightbook sniffs your browser's locale and if it's US, it automatically unchecks this box for you for this reason. If you're in the US, don't turn it on; doing so will just create noise.
Another question for you. Is there a way I can "search" or filter to get flights with (dual AND (simulated instrument OR IMC time logged)?
Heh. I re-checked the box. Thanks!
Another question for you. Is there a way I can "search" or filter to get flights with (dual AND (simulated instrument OR IMC time logged)?
Turns out several of my primary instructors were not CFII's. and I'm having trouble figuring out exactly how much instrument instruction I have.
I’m assuming it’s not usable time for my IR rating, which isn’t a problem anyway, turns out I have enough dual even without those hours.Non CFII instructors have to give “flight by reference to instruments” for the Private which has whole threads here about how that differs from “instrument instruction”.
What you log gets weird and is dancing on pin heads but there’s also limits on whether it can be used for a future rating, and who can provide it... so that’s what most people log instead because it’s what they need to do the next rating... most candidates just want that number to be right.
What to put in an electronic log... I need to think about that. LOL. Messy.
Don't look in foreflight. This is in MyFlightbook. And there are three ways you can log "IFR Time" depending on what you mean: you can log "Simulated Instrument" for time when you are under the hood in a real aircraft (or using a sim in simulated imc environment), you can log IMC if you're in the soup in an aircraft, or you can log "IFR Time" if you're on an instrument flight plan (regardless of conditions). Note that the latter, I don't think, counts as instrument instruction.How do I find that in FF? I don’t see an area to log IFR time
heck yeah, I AM a student pilot... 12.7 hours so far. I did get in my 0.5 hours IFR on Friday. I must say I was brilliant
Another thought would be to incorporate some sort of "show all" functionality that would hide inactive aircraft by default but let you expand to show all aircraft for those occasional flights-in-inactive aircraft.
N11111
N22222
N33333
(show inactive)
N11111
N22222
N33333
(show inactive)
N111AA
N222BB
N333CC
N444DD
etc.
Why not just clean up a bunch of the old ones?A cautionary tale - I got a warning from Google that my account was nearing its 15 GB limit. "Say what?" said I. I checked and I had a ton of myflightbook backups in there. Apparently 8 GB worth!
I was getting a backup every night, as usual, but I failed to notice there is an option within MFB to either have each backup consist of a name with the date in it (therefore each backup is maintained), or to let it have the same name each night, therefore overwriting itself each time. Yes, I had a few years of nightly backup files in there.
I did go in and change the backup option to "overwrite". Whew.
So now if your logbook gets corrupted the next day you’ll destroy the best data with the corrupted backup
Why not just clean up a bunch of the old ones?
I do non overwriting and only backup every couple months. I also print it out as my real backup.Okay, yeah I guess I could do that. But Google Drive's method for deleting a lot of files isn't very great, at least that I could find, and took a while, so I didn't want to do it again.
Plus, at least to me, MFB is still actually a backup to a backup of what I consider my "official" logbook. Even if my MFB logbook got corrupted I could re-build it in a matter of seconds of work.
But yeah, maybe I'll just turn on the non-overwriting backups again.