...I don’t really remember any other milestone hours.
It never ends. I have quite a few hours in quite a few logbooks and I like rolling over zeros the same now as I did when I hit 100, 200, 500, 1,000...The round numbers are fun. I enjoy totaling up a new page; my cfii who has 3000+ hours, all GA, said he still gets a kick out of totaling up a page. I crossed 250 on my way down here...time to start on my commercial? The flight home will fill out a page, looking forward to adding 20 hours to each column.
It never ends. I have quite a few hours in quite a few logbooks and I like rolling over zeros the same now as I did when I hit 100, 200, 500, 1,000...
A belated congrats! How many more pages in your logbook? I started my 2nd not long after I hit 400.Went flying this afternoon and passed 400 hours TT.
Fixed point? Or IEEE754?I prefer to look at binary milestones rather than base ten.
60% for me. My IR training is bringing that percentage back down.Just out of curiosity, what % of everyone’s hours are cross country?
I recently did totals for insurance and had 614 total, 342 cross country (50nm definition).
For some guys, it does end... like airline pilots who just don't care anymore and grind it out. It's just a job and they don't care.It never ends. I have quite a few hours in quite a few logbooks and I like rolling over zeros the same now as I did when I hit 100, 200, 500, 1,000...
60% for me. My IR training is bringing that percentage back down.
We're suppose to keep logbooks?
Just out of curiosity, what % of everyone’s hours are cross country?
I recently did totals for insurance and had 614 total, 342 cross country (50nm definition).
Mine worked out to be 40%, but I'm fairly new to all this, so a lot of my time is training. Back out my 100 hours of dual, and it jumps to 60%Just out of curiosity, what % of everyone’s hours are cross country?
I recently did totals for insurance and had 614 total, 342 cross country (50nm definition).
Thanks! I have three pages left in my log book.A belated congrats! How many more pages in your logbook? I started my 2nd not long after I hit 400.
56% for me.Just out of curiosity, what % of everyone’s hours are cross country?
I recently did totals for insurance and had 614 total, 342 cross country (50nm definition).
Starting your instrument training after starting your second logbook makes it easier for the DPE to review all your training during the check ride. Just sayin'Thanks! I have three pages left in my log book.
Same for me. Since I am just about at 300 hours (hit 294 last night), and my PPL training spanned 16 years, my first 100 hours was probably 75% training. If you look at my last 200 hours, I would guess 90% of it is cross country. My usual non-cross country flights are just sight seeing fun flights for people that want to experience flying. I am not going to feel bad about that. I am more like @Ted . Most of my current non-training flying is 300nm+ and that's just one way.Mine worked out to be 40%, but I'm fairly new to all this, so a lot of my time is training. Back out my 100 hours of dual, and it jumps to 60%
...a small one, but nonetheless, a milestone for me.
Went flying this afternoon and passed 400 hours TT. I think back to the day I soloed and the many fun experiences and learning lessons that I’ve had thus far.
Here’s to many more!
60% for me. My IR training is bringing that percentage back down.
A belated congrats! How many more pages in your logbook? I started my 2nd not long after I hit 400.
Thanks! I have three pages left in my log book.
I haven’t opened my logbook since September when I did the last entry in it (acceptance flight in the MU2 for the new owner), but as I recall it’s something around 3,300 total, all but 50 or so is XC. So something like 98.5% XC time.
If you then looked at my XC time, the vast, vast majority of it is probably 300+ nm trips.