Melissa2983298
Pre-Flight
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- Mar 3, 2014
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Melissa
Hello, does anyone know of an A&P program in the Great Lakes area that are “weekend” classes? Thank you for all of your help!
Doing it by weeked classes only would take you 30+ years to accumulate the required classroom time....
Or, you know, 5?
Hopefully the weekend A&P school teaches math.
Even weekend Masters degree classes take a couple of years and don’t require as much seat time in the classroom
interesting. An aircraft mechanic is more educated than someone that holds a masters degree. Which masters? Art history … MBA?
I think I’ll save this thread as a reference next time some moron complains about shop rates. If we paid our mechanics better there might be more of them and there wouldn’t be so many threads about mx delays.
Perhaps. I think just having one would be a good start.Might even get better mechanics.
Wouldn’t it be 12.5 years if they only met 4 hours every Saturday and don’t have classes on legal holiday weekends?
IIRC A typical FAR 147 school curriculum is 1900 hrs.which would most likely require at least 3 years to complete.
Is OP referring to A & P “Test Prep “ schools ?
For many folks getting the A&P as a long range project an option is the
experience route per FAR 65.77. Helping people with Annuals or projects will result in logging hours. Not easy but can be doable. You have to be diligent to keep up your diary/log.
I believe there was a thread on this a few months ago.
At 1900 hours average, and doing 12 hours a weekend, with the assumption of having all the required classes run as scheduled, yeah, one might get it done in 5 years. In reality, won’t happen. Instructor and lab scheduling gets wacked and a class gets dropped for a cycle and everything gets extended for another semester or more.
All the schools I know of only teach classes in a specific order and it’s generally on an alternating year cycle.
Even weekend Masters degree classes take a couple of years and don’t require as much seat time in the classroom
Check your mathA 4 hr class every Saturday = about 100 hrs per year or 19 years to meet minimum.
If Part 147 ; years could be dependent if you meet Sat & Sun for xx hrs/day.
i doubt it would be practical to assemble a group all willing to take the long train ride at the same time.
All schools run on numbers.
Here's one version:which I think you could find in the Federal Register)
The 147 min is 1900 hrs. Where I went to A&P School the curriculum was 1950 hrs.(Seen some as high as 2100hr). It took me 2 yrs but I had a more than normal absences and had to make up the time I missed.IIRC A typical FAR 147 school curriculum is 1900 hrs.which would most likely require at least 3 years to complete.
Check your math
1900 wasn’t (isn’t) the average, it’s the minimum requirement, for a few more months at least.
FYI: those "standards" are the same as the previous version and each student is not required to OH an engine. You have to look at the teaching level definitions (1, 2, 3) next to each task to see what amount of detail is required with the majority of the subjects being taught in a classroom environment. In very general terms, this new revision will allow the expansion of the Part 147 schools by reducing the bureaucratic red tape.he new standards require a student to over haul a recip engine, a turbine engine and a carb, among the 41 specific training modules.
It would take 2 of my weekends just to read this legalized government bureaucratic mess.