Old Geek
Pattern Altitude
Never mind. Just realized the answer must be no. Otherwise pilots overdue would never be able to become current again.
If you are not eligible to and serving as PIC during the flight you better make sure your instructor is. I had an instructor friend who had no medical. I could do my BFR with him as long as I was still current.
Greg ... Cyndi got to Blue Springs Tuesday night in the middle of that gullywasher. She had a basement. Now she's got a covered swimming pool.
Jim
Yeah. I'm guessing no more than 60 posts arguing about it.that was easy.....
Yeah. I'm guessing no more than 60 posts arguing about it.
So during your flight review, do you log the time as PIC time?
(Is the answer different depending on whether you are still current, or are not current?)
So during your flight review, do you log the time as PIC time? (Is the answer different depending on whether you are still current, or are not current?)
Only if your pilot certificate has the category and class (and type rating if one is required) of the airplane you're taking the BFR in, and then only for the time that you are sole manipulator of the controls.
But...but...but WWRS??
You can't take a BFR in an aircraft you are not rated for.
He would wait until post 61, repeat what everyone else wrote, quote chapter and verse of the regulations, throw in some CC letters, add some latin verbage and tell you this is "on point".
But...but...but WWRS??
Folks with access to the AOPA Forum might enjoy watching him attempting to school several attorneys on the law:
http://forums.aopa.org/showthread.php?p=1824596#post1824596
Hard quote? I tried logging into an account, says I don't have one, tried to make one, says I have one, tried to reset PW/username, says I don't have one.
It goes on for a couple of pages; it would be rather time-consuming to quote it all.
He would wait until post 61, repeat what everyone else wrote, quote chapter and verse of the regulations, throw in some CC letters, add some latin verbage and tell you this is "on point".
Folks with access to the AOPA Forum might enjoy watching him attempting to school several attorneys on the law:
http://forums.aopa.org/showthread.php?p=1824596#post1824596
TL;DR Ron doesn't know what he's talking about?
90% of the time he did.
When he agreed with himself, yes.