Yes, Part-NCO (and this its GM) is applicable to non-commercial operations with other-than-complex aircraft.
So two PPLs can decide to share duties in flying the Cirrus, as long as:
“Other-than-complex” is:
A tilt rotor aircraft is always complex.
CW wrote:
As CRI you can instruct for non complex airplanes towards a single pilot privilege. Need 15 hrs within the past 12 months and demonstrate ability to instruct in this class to a qualified instructor.
@CW
Did I get this right?
To instruct as CRI on NCO planes for single pilot ops one needs to obtain
- the relevant Class Rating
- then 15 hours PIC on it within 12 months
- and then another qualified instructor to demonstrate ability to instruct (how does that work in practice? or
- a demonstration of competency with a FIE.
Thanks
EDIT: Found an answer.
FCL.910.CRI CRI – Restricted privileges
(a) The privileges of a CRI are restricted to the class or type of aeroplane in which the instructor assessment of competence was taken. The privileges of the CRI shall be extended to further classes or types when the CRI has completed, within the last 12 months:
(1) 15 hours flight time as PIC on aeroplanes of the applicable class or type of aeroplane;
(2) one training flight from the right hand seat under the supervision of another CRI or FI qualified for that class or type occupying the other pilot’s seat.
No, since the cirrus is certificated as single pilot.
The PIC can declare the second pilot to be a crewmember instead of a pax (eg for handling radio or traffic watch), but that is merely an „activity“ and not „pilot function time“ that can be recorded.
Sidenote: A legal implication of this is that eg a personal injury/life insurance that wiould pay if you are a pax will not pay if you were a „crewmember“ that actively engaged in the flight.
Sidenote: A legal implication of this is that eg a personal injury/life insurance that wiould pay if you are a pax will not pay if you were a „crewmember“ that actively engaged in the flight.
The financial implication is that you won’t pay airport pax fee for at least one person
In practice this often doesn’t work though. Except in parts of Eastern Europe.
Elsewhere, at the very least, they want to see the pilots license of the second crewmember. But most of the time, they will flat out decline, since, in private SEP flight, “there can only be one pilot”…
boscomantico wrote:
Except in parts of Eastern Europe.
Few days ago I departed from Zagreb with 2 additional crew members.