Josh Whitman
Filing Flight Plan
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- Sep 20, 2018
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Josh Whitman
I've read so many different things logging XC time that all I know for sure is that I'm making myself more confused than necessary.
First, my situation. I am a student pilot training part 61 for my private pilot certificate. I then intend to complete a part 141 instrument course and 141 commercial. I ultimately have my sights on the airlines and will likely instruct at my school which sometimes pays for CFI and CFII until I can get a FO spot with a regional or possibly look at something 135.
Here is where I get confused:
14 CFR 61.1(b)(3)(i):
Question 1: If I do a touch and go at KLGC, and then spend an hour doing maneuvers before returning to KCCO does the entire flight go in the XC column or just the portion where I navigated from KCCO to KLGC. I've seen answers saying yes and no.
14 CFR 61.1(b)(3)(ii):
Question 2: I am logging it like this because I've seen that not logging basic XC can hurt you down the road when an application wants to know basic XC time regardless of distance (insurance, rentals, some part 135 jobs, ect). When I print out my logbook the basic XC will show in the cross country column, but I can also print out a separate log that shows just the XC > 50M flights and that total as well. Is there an issue with the way I'm logging it? Am I creating more trouble now than I think I am saving in the future?
One article that I'm following is the AOPA article titled "Logging Cross-Country Time" (I would post a link bit I the forum says I'm too green for that! )
First, my situation. I am a student pilot training part 61 for my private pilot certificate. I then intend to complete a part 141 instrument course and 141 commercial. I ultimately have my sights on the airlines and will likely instruct at my school which sometimes pays for CFI and CFII until I can get a FO spot with a regional or possibly look at something 135.
Here is where I get confused:
14 CFR 61.1(b)(3)(i):
I understand that to be the definition of what is sometimes referred to as "Basic Cross Country". It's a broad definition and to my understanding, as long as I navigate to a landing point other than my departure point (Doesn't even need to be an airport for that matter) I can log the time in the XC column. If I take off from KCCO and navigate to and land at KLGC (23.7NM) the flight can be logged as XC according to the above.Cross-country time means -
(i) Except as provided in paragraphs (ii) through (vi) of this definition, time acquired during flight -
(A) Conducted by a person who holds a pilot certificate;
(B) Conducted in an aircraft;
(C) That includes a landing at a point other than the point of departure; and
(D) That involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage, electronic navigation aids, radio aids, or other navigation systems to navigate to the landing point.
Question 1: If I do a touch and go at KLGC, and then spend an hour doing maneuvers before returning to KCCO does the entire flight go in the XC column or just the portion where I navigated from KCCO to KLGC. I've seen answers saying yes and no.
14 CFR 61.1(b)(3)(ii):
Obviously the flight from KCCO to KLGC would not qualify for this definition of XC and obviously I need to be keeping track of flights that do fit this requirement as I need them to meet the aeronautical experience requirements of the Private Pilot Certificate. I use an LogTen Pro and currently I log all flights that fit the "Basic Cross Country" definition. I then have an indicator on all flight logs that meet the aeronautical experience requirements definition of XC. This allows me to know that right now I have 21.2 hours of "Basic cross country" flights and 3.7 hours of which were flights that included a landing at an airport more than 50 NM from the point of departure.(ii) For the purpose of meeting the aeronautical experience requirements (except for a rotorcraft category rating), for a private pilot certificate (except for a powered parachute category rating), a commercial pilot certificate, or an instrument rating, or for the purpose of exercising recreational pilot privileges (except in a rotorcraft) under§ 61.101 (c), time acquired during a flight -
(A) Conducted in an appropriate aircraft;
(B) That includes a point of landing that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles from the original point of departure; and
(C) That involves the use of dead reckoning, pilotage, electronic navigation aids, radio aids, or other navigation systems to navigate to the landing point.
Question 2: I am logging it like this because I've seen that not logging basic XC can hurt you down the road when an application wants to know basic XC time regardless of distance (insurance, rentals, some part 135 jobs, ect). When I print out my logbook the basic XC will show in the cross country column, but I can also print out a separate log that shows just the XC > 50M flights and that total as well. Is there an issue with the way I'm logging it? Am I creating more trouble now than I think I am saving in the future?
One article that I'm following is the AOPA article titled "Logging Cross-Country Time" (I would post a link bit I the forum says I'm too green for that! )