Sifossifoco
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Oct 12, 2021
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Sifossifoco
Okay, first post for me, so this is my story... Ultimate 'rusty pilot' with an Italian PPL (about 200 hours total) that went lost after I moved away from Italy over 25 years ago. Haven't flown since, till this January, when I decided to get a fresh FAA license and start from scratch, given the amount of time without flying and the fact that I now live in the Cayman Islands (no flight training in Grand Cayman).
I picked one of the many accelerated programs (I would rather not name it for now), which was a complete joke. The 172 I was given was older than the one I had in Italy when I got my license in 1989. The instructor, on the other hand, was a very young guy that openly told me he hated working as an instructor. To make a long story short, I did 18 hours in those conditions, then the plane broke, the instructor could not give me any structured training for the check ride, there was no replacement for any of them and I decided to stop there.
Right now I have those 18 hours, my third class medical, a theory test passed with a decent 92, a student pilot license and the approval from TSA to train (I am a non-US citizen). I would like to find a finish up program, ideally accelerated, that could be more reliable than my first experience, hopefully near New York because that's where my wife lives and works, so I am often there. If there are better options away from New York, I am happy to consider them too. Any advice on where to find a place with reasonably new airplanes and the flexibility to train a non-resident? Happy to pay more to train in a glass cockpit, and with an experienced, reliable instructor. Thanks for your help.
I picked one of the many accelerated programs (I would rather not name it for now), which was a complete joke. The 172 I was given was older than the one I had in Italy when I got my license in 1989. The instructor, on the other hand, was a very young guy that openly told me he hated working as an instructor. To make a long story short, I did 18 hours in those conditions, then the plane broke, the instructor could not give me any structured training for the check ride, there was no replacement for any of them and I decided to stop there.
Right now I have those 18 hours, my third class medical, a theory test passed with a decent 92, a student pilot license and the approval from TSA to train (I am a non-US citizen). I would like to find a finish up program, ideally accelerated, that could be more reliable than my first experience, hopefully near New York because that's where my wife lives and works, so I am often there. If there are better options away from New York, I am happy to consider them too. Any advice on where to find a place with reasonably new airplanes and the flexibility to train a non-resident? Happy to pay more to train in a glass cockpit, and with an experienced, reliable instructor. Thanks for your help.