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Old 08-24-2013, 12:34 PM
  #6601  
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Originally Posted by Twin Wasp View Post
The regs don't say much about logging SIC time. However, that's the way the company and regs count the time towards your daily, 48 hour, 7, 30, and 90 day and 12 month limits.
That would fly in the face of the regs as those limits are generally defined as "duty aloft", which is ALL time block to block. On a four person crew you are still a REQUIRED crewmember and, thus it is duty aloft and is accepted as logbook time.

If you are assigned a 13 hour flight thereby REQUIRING 4 crew, ALL 13 hours counts towards any flight time limitations. Many years of international ops and I have not seen it done any other way.
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Old 08-24-2013, 12:36 PM
  #6602  
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Im sure this has been debated to death but every FO I have talked to logs the entire flight time as SIC regardless of crew complement. My previous employers also did not break down augmented flights for FAR tracking purposes like the above example. The regs seem to approve both methods. Anyways, its probably all irrelevant at the end of the day.
§ 61.51 Pilot logbooks.(f) Logging second-in-command flight time. A person may log second-in-command time only for that flight time during which that person:

(1) Is qualified in accordance with the second-in-command requirements of § 61.55 of this part, and occupies a crewmember station in an aircraft that requires more than one pilot by the aircraft's type certificate; or

(2) Holds the appropriate category, class, and instrument rating (if an instrument rating is required for the flight) for the aircraft being flown, and more than one pilot is required under the type certification of the aircraft or the regulations under which the flight is being conducted.
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Old 08-24-2013, 12:42 PM
  #6603  
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Originally Posted by f10a View Post
Wow that seems complicated. Is that what the regs dictate as I have not seen an interpretation like this before.
Well, the way I see it is this: The FAA counts IRO time toward the 100-hour consolidation requirement, so it's implied that the entire flight can legally be logged. I'm trying to find a letter of interpretation, but I haven't heard of anyone getting in trouble for it.
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Old 08-24-2013, 12:45 PM
  #6604  
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If I am listed as crew, I log the whole flight. I did not know people logged it any other way. No pic logged unless one signs for the airplane.
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Old 08-24-2013, 01:16 PM
  #6605  
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Originally Posted by NightIP View Post
Well, the way I see it is this: The FAA counts IRO time toward the 100-hour consolidation requirement, so it's implied that the entire flight can legally be logged. I'm trying to find a letter of interpretation, but I haven't heard of anyone getting in trouble for it.
It can certainly all be logged, I just choose not to log flight time "acquired" while unconcious in the bunk. Just my "portion" based on no. of operating crewmembers.
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Old 08-24-2013, 01:17 PM
  #6606  
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Originally Posted by 727gm View Post
It can certainly all be logged, I just choose not to log flight time "acquired" while unconcious in the bunk.
I hear ya... It's just that if a motor shreds itself while you're back in the bunk, you won't be left alone to sleep through it.

Just the way I see it...
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Old 08-24-2013, 01:23 PM
  #6607  
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Originally Posted by f10a View Post
Wow that seems complicated. Is that what the regs dictate as I have not seen an interpretation like this before.
Not complicated at all. And not a "legal interpretation", the regs don't dictate it. I just choose not to log the sleeptime in the bunk. I do note the total block time for the leg elsewhere in the log entry.
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Old 08-24-2013, 01:31 PM
  #6608  
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Originally Posted by Twin Wasp View Post
In theory no one's supposed to be in the seat more than 8 hours. But I just did DWC - AUH - PVG. The DWC - AUH leg was 44 minutes block (a new personal record beating my 55 minutes MFM - HKG.) The company will figure we all flew 30 minutes that leg. Usually if I'm the third wheel for a short hop I'll try to give the other pilots an extra 15 minutes or 30 minutes rest the next leg.
Did DXB-DXB local flight of 3:22 once, hopping over to DWC the wind increased above tailwind landing limits and we held per the customer at the final fix for over 2 hours while the tailwind increased, then returned to DXB. We had 3 or 4 crewmembers.
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Old 08-24-2013, 03:47 PM
  #6609  
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Ferried an empty airplane DXB-SHJ...takeoff to touchdown in 6 minutes!! Took off Rwy 30R DXB and landed Rwy 12 SHJ...personal record...Captain gave me the leg, and immediately regretted it since ALL I had to do was fly the damn airplane. He was running checklists, typing in the FMC, talking on the radio, blah, blah, blah...
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Old 08-24-2013, 05:19 PM
  #6610  
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I, too, log the whole flight If I am operating crew.
Splitting hairs is a slippery slope for me. Actual time in the seat vs. scheduled? Time in the bunk? Time in the jump seat during TO/LDG? Time in the jumpseat doing OPS Calcs or aircraft logbook? Duty time but not in seat - in the lav or galley?
Too much for my tired brain.
Now, PIC time I do split. If I sign the flight plan, I log it as PIC. Obviously the Captain logs that same time as PIC, but there are other instances where two crew members can log PIC simultaneously (i.e. CFI with a licensed pilot doing training) and even though I'm not getting the big bucks, I'm typed and if my signature is on it, I'm logging it.
YMMV
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