Princesspilot206
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Princesspilot
In all seriousness, looking for some stellar advice on knocking this out of the park. Please and thank you!
This 100%. Your flying will not be perfect on the ride. Own it and critique yourself as if you were a student.You're gonna make a mistake, somewhere, somehow. Admit it, then turn it into a teaching moment.
No examiner should expect you to know everything, but you should be very familiar with these and have copies.Know the Private, Commercial, and CFI ACS inside and out. There should be zero questions in your mind on anything in any of those publications.
Again, your examiner shouldn't expect you to have these memorized. But have a copy of the AC, and maybe a flow chart of what endorsements are needed when.Know every single endorsement you'll be able to provide cold. And if you stumble, know exactly where to find the answer in the FARs and AC 61-65.
My examiner appreciated that mine was tabbed and highlighted. There was only one reg that I had to look in the TOC for. And there was plenty that I had to look in the book for. In fact, he expected me to. I'd say it's poor form to rely solely on your memory for complicated and important details unless you're Rainman.Tabbing the FAR/AIM ain't gonna impress anyone.
This 100%. Your flying will not be perfect on the ride. Own it and critique yourself as if you were a student.
No examiner should expect you to know everything, but you should be very familiar with these and have copies.
Again, your examiner shouldn't expect you to have these memorized. But have a copy of the AC, and maybe a flow chart of what endorsements are needed when.
My examiner appreciated that mine was tabbed and highlighted. There was only one reg that I had to look in the TOC for. And there was plenty that I had to look in the book for. In fact, he expected me to. I'd say it's poor form to rely solely on your memory for complicated and important details unless you're Rainman.
...looking for some stellar advice on knocking this out of the park...
So you really want to knock it out of the park? Here you go:In all seriousness, looking for some stellar advice on knocking this out of the park. Please and thank you!
This is the best advice IMO.It was daunting to teach until I spent all day for a couple weeks leading up to my checkride working remotely in the main study room of the flight school. Every private, instrument, commercial, multi, other CFIs and CFI applicants came into the study room I would tell them that any question or doubt on any material to ask me to teach it to them.
Even on some topics I thought I had a solid knowledge I was hot garbage at explaining it until I practiced dozens of times. It was a big confidence boost for the checkride.
Good advice, but I can’t imagine that’s standard across the board with all DPE’s. You still have to fly the maneuver to ACS standards at the end of the day.While you're flying, do not use 100% of your attention trying to fly well. The examiner already knows you can fly the maneuvers within standards, after all, you've passed at least 3 checkrides by this point.
For example, the examiner asks you to demonstrate steep turns. So you focus on nailing it - you're within 10 feet and roll out exactly on your heading, etc. Except to do that took 100% of your attention, and likely you didn't explain much, or very well, during the maneuver. And more importantly, you didn't give yourself a chance to show how to correct anything.
If I'm demo-ing a maneuver to a student, and I happen to be absolutely nailing it, that's not ideal - because there's nothing to talk about correcting. Heck, if this is starting to happen I will intentionally introduce some error so I have something to talk about. But it's easier to just let things happen as they do - "okay, see, I'm getting a little steep here, so I'll roll out a few degrees of bank. As I'm doing that I want to make sure I don't climb...." Of course you need to be aware enough of what's going on to do this, but you should be at that point by now anyway.
It's the same on the CFI checkride. DON'T do everything perfectly. The examiner would much rather you show how to correct a situation than to just nail everything.
In some ways, this actually makes it easier.
Know which endorsements are needed to solo a student, cross-country and those needed for a private pilot practical found in AC 61-65H. You don't need the exact wording, but you should know from memory basically those needed.
Know from memory what counts as a cross-country for a student. For example at least 50NM from departure point to another point of landing, but there can be shorter legs between. Only one stop has to be 50NM from departure. Also they must be full stop landings.
61.109(a)(5)(ii)Yes, it has to be to a landing, but there is no full stop requirement.
Yes, it states that specifically for the long cross country which is not what you referenced in your previous post.61.109(a)(5)(ii)
One solo cross country flight of 150 nautical miles total distance, with full-stop landings at three points, and one segment of the flight consisting of a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles between the takeoff and landing locations; and