What he said. Almost exactly my experience.I have done endorsements in as little a 3 hours and as much as 15-20hours. 5-10 is probably more typical. Insurance often required 5-10 hours.
It required 10 hours of dual to solo, right? That does not prevent you from getting the endorsement with fewer hours.When I started with the 120 my insurance required 10 hours. That was way too long. We ended up doing a bunch of stalls and spins for the fun of it.
Technically, a person with a SEL rating could be sole manipulator of the controls for 0.1 hours in a Cub in cruise with zero take offs or landings and be legally qualified to fly tailwheel aircraft, as long as the time was logged. Like lots of other pilots I have well over 1000 hours of TW time but no endorsement, and the initial qualification to fly solo was a simple "check-out" of about an hour or two.The training and endorsement required by paragraph (i)(1) of this section is not required if the person logged pilot-in-command time in a tailwheel airplane before April 15, 1991.
Keep in mind that those simple check-outs of an hour or two are part of the reason 61.31 requires an endorsement.I always smile at this part of 61.31:
Technically, a person with a SEL rating could be sole manipulator of the controls for 0.1 hours in a Cub in cruise with zero take offs or landings and be legally qualified to fly tailwheel aircraft, as long as the time was logged. Like lots of other pilots I have well over 1000 hours of TW time but no endorsement, and the initial qualification to fly solo was a simple "check-out" of about an hour or two.
Keep in mind that those simple check-outs of an hour or two are part of the reason 61.31 requires an endorsement.
Despite having a Commercial license and lots of other experience, that first time solo in a taildragger was just as exciting and nerve wracking as my first solo.
I had to learn to land a Pawnee over an obstacle onto a 1500-ft strip. I ended up looking at the wingtip for my pitch reference the first handful of landings.Beyond that is a "second first solo", which is a little unusual in that there is no way to fly dual with an instructor to get you prepared to fly alone. There's only one seat in the Pawnee, and the long nose creates a totally different sight picture from other tailwheel aircraft I had flown in the previous 35+ years. I remember a fairly routine takeoff and pattern, then wondered what it even feels like to land this thing . . .
Self-checkouts are definitely viable. Unfortunately a lot of pilots do a very poor job of self-evaluation.Hah! I checked myself out in a C-120. Of course, by then I was a 1,000 hour CFI and had just done a flight review in the airplane.
Self checkouts require the discipline to read the manual, know the cockpit layout, assess the pitch attitudes of the aircraft and have a lot of speed discipline, at a minimum.Self-checkouts are definitely viable. Unfortunately a lot of pilots do a very poor job of self-evaluation.
I remember the Pawnees were used extensively for glider tows when I flew out of Van Sant Airport in Pennsylvania. Always enjoyed seeing them fly.Beyond that is a "second first solo", which is a little unusual in that there is no way to fly dual with an instructor to get you prepared to fly alone. There's only one seat in the Pawnee, and the long nose creates a totally different sight picture from other tailwheel aircraft I had flown in the previous 35+ years. I remember a fairly routine takeoff and pattern, then wondered what it even feels like to land this thing . . .
Over 2,000 flights in the thing since then, I love flying it.
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I haven't flown a Pawnee, but I remember that feeling from my first 1-26 flight.Beyond that is a "second first solo", which is a little unusual in that there is no way to fly dual with an instructor to get you prepared to fly alone. There's only one seat in the Pawnee, and the long nose creates a totally different sight picture from other tailwheel aircraft I had flown in the previous 35+ years. I remember a fairly routine takeoff and pattern, then wondered what it even feels like to land this thing . . .
Over 2,000 flights in the thing since then, I love flying it.
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My first Ag Husky flight was kind of nerve-wracking…I couldn’t find the fuel valve to make sure it was on, but figured after fifteen minutes the engine was still running, so odds were good.I haven't flown a Pawnee, but I remember that feeling from my first 1-26 flight.
What is the average cost and time for students to get the tailwheel endorsement?