PilotRPI
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What does it take to become a flight instructor? What are the minimum hour requirements and certifications? I assume you have to have your instrument and commercial. What is the training like after that?
I ask because there is a big difference in what the regs say, versus how people actually approach it and what is practical to pass it. Would love to hear peoples' experiences and thoughts. If someone wants their PPL, if we tell them to read the FAR/AIM book to get a feeling for what it is like to get their private, that hardly does the experience justice.
I am just about to start my instrument. I have about 350 hours. I am contemplating this as I love everything aviation and love teaching. Not looking to build hours quickly or anything like that. Just thinking about things I could do in the future to be involved with aviation. I think it would be a true challenge and honor to bring new people into aviation and to make people better pilots.
I have heard some real horror stories from people, especially those using the CFI to build hours to make the airlines. No interest in that at all.
What do the regs say that contradicts how people approach it and what is practical to pass it?I ask because there is a big difference in what the regs say, versus how people actually approach it and what is practical to pass it. Would love to hear peoples' experiences and thoughts. If someone wants their PPL, if we tell them to read the FAR/AIM book to get a feeling for what it is like to get their private, that hardly does the experience justice.
It is indeed the most difficult to get. I recently reinstated my CFI after a 20 year hiatus. I studied every chance I got for five weeks prior to taking the oral & flight test. My wife was amazed how many hours I buried myself in my study.
The oral exam by the examiner lasted five grueling hours & then a two hour check ride. I performed & explained every commercial maneuver.
I will never let it lapse again. With thousands of hours of instruction under my belt since 1975 (less the twenty years) I can honestly say that I really learned to fly while instructing.
It's worth the hard work & effort. Go for it.
No I don't have my MEI-I. I thought about going that route but didn't see an immediate need to get my MEI-I.
I guess I did my reinstatement the hard way but it was also the least expensive route.
It was cool doing the check ride in my own 182. Although I did have to bring my aircraft logbooks to prove it was airworthy. I had the Transponder certified just days before the ride realizing that it has expired.
I hold a CFII. I was very active 5+ years ago, but haven't flown since then....
I have kept my currency up by taking the FIRC every TWO years. Obviously I am somewhat rusty.
Since I haven't flown, what are the requirements for:
1.) Just to be able to rent a plane and fly VFR only with friends (passengers)/
2.) Become 100% active again as a working CFII ?
I hold a CFII. I was very active 5+ years ago, but haven't flown since then....
I have kept my currency up by taking the FIRC every TWO years. Obviously I am somewhat rusty.
Since I haven't flown, what are the requirements for:
1.) Just to be able to rent a plane and fly VFR only with friends (passengers)/
2.) Become 100% active again as a working CFII ?
Welcome to PoA, and your first post...
How many more years "+" than 5? Currency requirements haven't changed for your certificates and ratings in the last five years, but the "+" is vague... do you know what year you stopped flying, or not?
Looks like a spiffy new copy of the 2017 FAR/AIM is in your future! Might as well get used to looking stuff up again!
Hope you enjoy "coming back". A number of us here have taken long breaks from flying and returned to it.
Go to your local airport and get a Flight Review. I took a FR course from AOPA for a refresher and printed out the certificate, and the CFI who checked me out accepted it for the one hour ground instruction requirement. I did this awhile back, knocked out the FR while also checking out in the plane so I could rent it. As far as becoming an active CFII, I also talked to the flight school owner and he put me on staff. Haven't done much instructing though as I told the owner let the young instructors have the students as they goals to move on in their aviation careers, and I was there at one point myself. I think the biggest thing now is the automation and sophisticated GPSs in planes now, although this flight school has old Cessna 152/172s w/ steam gauges. But you can begin instructing right away.
Go to your local airport and get a Flight Review. I took a FR course from AOPA for a refresher and printed out the certificate, and the CFI who checked me out accepted it for the one hour ground instruction requirement. I did this awhile back, knocked out the FR while also checking out in the plane so I could rent it. As far as becoming an active CFII, I also talked to the flight school owner and he put me on staff. Haven't done much instructing though as I told the owner let the young instructors have the students as they goals to move on in their aviation careers, and I was there at one point myself. I think the biggest thing now is the automation and sophisticated GPSs in planes now, although this flight school has old Cessna 152/172s w/ steam gauges. But you can begin instructing right away.
I looked at my logbook this morning. It's been 9 years. I actually went flying with a buddy the other day, and i did pretty good. Just like getting back on a bike again.. as the saying goes. Can I get checked out just to fly VFR so I can knock the rust off on my own time ... and then after I feel good, I can go do the CFII checkout with the CFI? I may have to call FSDO for this answer as it sounds sort of complex. Anybody have any experience in this situation... input is apprecaiated. Here is my dilemn. I would imagine that a CFI who checks me out (endorses me) to be a CFI again, is going to require a more rigorous checkout, and they should and must. What if I tell him I just want him to check me out with a limitation of just flying VFR? I feel I am ready for that now. I'd like to get back to at least being legal to rent a plane VFR again so I can brush up on my CFI type maneuvers (checkout) on my own time solo. What do you guys think? Can i do a simple VFR (PPL) type checkout only, to get in the air quicker solo?Go to your local airport and get a Flight Review. I took a FR course from AOPA for a refresher and printed out the certificate, and the CFI who checked me out accepted it for the one hour ground instruction requirement. I did this awhile back, knocked out the FR while also checking out in the plane so I could rent it. As far as becoming an active CFII, I also talked to the flight school owner and he put me on staff. Haven't done much instructing though as I told the owner let the young instructors have the students as they goals to move on in their aviation careers, and I was there at one point myself. I think the biggest thing now is the automation and sophisticated GPSs in planes now, although this flight school has old Cessna 152/172s w/ steam gauges. But you can begin instructing right away.
This is what I'm hoping/planning on doing. I'm at about 190 hours tt. Studying to take the commercial, cfi, agi, and foi writtens by the end of october/beginning of November.I did my commercial and CFI training at the exact same time. I just had to wait for my commercial check ride in order to take my CFI ride. Got used to flying both left and right seat. Best thing I ever did, and saved me so much money
Like others mentioned, take the CFII written while it's all fresh in your mind. My mistake was not doing that, and I had to study from scratch a few months later.
This is what I'm hoping/planning on doing. I'm at about 190 hours tt. Studying to take the commercial, cfi, agi, and foi writtens by the end of october/beginning of November.
Any suggestions?
61.56 is the Flight Review requirement. That's required regardless of VFR/IFR/Whatever.I looked at my logbook this morning. It's been 9 years. I actually went flying with a buddy the other day, and i did pretty good. Just like getting back on a bike again.. as the saying goes. Can I get checked out just to fly VFR so I can knock the rust off on my own time ... and then after I feel good, I can go do the CFII checkout with the CFI? I may have to call FSDO for this answer as it sounds sort of complex. Anybody have any experience in this situation... input is apprecaiated. Here is my dilemn. I would imagine that a CFI who checks me out (endorses me) to be a CFI again, is going to require a more rigorous checkout, and they should and must. What if I tell him I just want him to check me out with a limitation of just flying VFR? I feel I am ready for that now. I'd like to get back to at least being legal to rent a plane VFR again so I can brush up on my CFI type maneuvers (checkout) on my own time solo. What do you guys think? Can i do a simple VFR (PPL) type checkout only, to get in the air quicker solo?
What does it take to become a flight instructor? What are the minimum hour requirements and certifications? I assume you have to have your instrument and commercial. What is the training like after that?
I have a decent amount set aside lol. Although not as much as what you needed for all that multi stuff.Do it, and have fun?
Have a big dollar amount set aside to do it with?
I did the writtens in May/June, now doing the flying. Commercial/Multi was severely delayed by a list of stuff a mile long that wasn't controllable. Multi/CFI is next. Then backward into single stuff when the airplane comes out of the shop.
Like this? http://www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Advisory_Circular/AC_61-65F.pdfThe hardest part for me as a CFI was figuring out the wording for signoffs. Surely there must be a book somewhere with recommended ones, but I never had it. (Im not an instructor anymore) Might look into that.
I have a decent amount set aside lol. Although not as much as what you needed for all that multi stuff.
Plus I'm flying in my own (complex) plane, which really helps reduce the cost.
The hardest part for me as a CFI was figuring out the wording for signoffs. Surely there must be a book somewhere with recommended ones, but I never had it. (Im not an instructor anymore) Might look into that.
Yep. The school I worked at made it easy for us and had everything nicely printed out on labels and tabbed for pre solo, private, IR, etc.Ha yeah. The multi has been kinda spendy. I knew that going in, so the savings account dropping rapidly isn't as scary as it might have been if I wasn't expecting the sudden downdraft. LOL.
Flying your own plane should be nice. I'm kinda looking forward to that part myself. I did buy a new little folder to put copies of the maintenance stuff in, so the examiner won't be laughing too hard at the high tech ziploc baggie that the important paperwork lives in today in the map pocket. Hahaha. Even got a "fancy" ziplock thingy with solid clear plastic to make that look a little prettier.
Probably make up a few nicely printed sheets for stuff like oil changes and VOR checks too, even though our leather bound notebook also shoved in the sidewall pocket is plenty legal with our handwritten chicken scratches in it. LOL.
Might as well make it all look cosmetically prettier. Gives a feel of being more organized, but frankly, I haven't had any trouble finding the appropriate chicken scratches to check things are legal in the last seven years. Since I'm the only IFR rated and current pilot flying the airplane, I'm usually the one who does the VOT test and writes it down, and it's usually me or the guy who keeps the logbooks who notices the static test is due, etc.
But a pretty rental notebook with color coded pages, it definitely isn't.
Heh. Beat me to it.
That AC plus these...
Pick your poison. Print them all on labels or learn to write real real small. Or both.
The pens are Pilot G2 0.38mm - the Ultra Fine ones. Don't bother with the 1.0, 0.7 or 0.5mm versions.
And the labels work real well. I sure wish some of the endorsements in my old logbooks were done right. Some of them really get the evil eye from folks, and I shrug and say I'll be happy to go get someone smarter to write another one in there if they like.
A particularly great one says this... and was written in the early 90s by an instructor who's still around and probably still writing them this badly... oh and I'm a lot smarter about what CFIs I'll use these days. I wouldn't fly with that guy without handing him a sticker and even then, probably wouldn't. But what did I know about it back then? Nada.
"A/C Check out. High perf. BFR. [Name, CFI Number, Signature.]"
Probably the only reason it slides by is that it was written that long ago. The Complex endorsement was legal, only because he used a pre-printed one in the back of the logbook. And it was also prior to 1997 when there weren't two endorsements for complex and high performance anyway. So I just show the one in the back and explain the 1997 change and then show them the bad one, with a "look what this prick did to my logbook" face on.
Even better? Done in a less than 200 HP aircraft. But he wrote "Hi perf." I mean seriously, you have to have your head square up and locked to do that to someone's logbook. Solidifies my "modern" opinion of the guy, at least, every time I have to explain that BS endorsement to anyone.
Anyway, labels. They work. I don't mind the extra couple of lines I have to leave blank in the book below that line if someone decides to stick it in the log section. Much better than explaining a doofus-written one years later. Plus the sticker makes them easy to find.
That AC is already copied into my iPad. I'm not going to be "that guy".
Yep. The school I worked at made it easy for us and had everything nicely printed out on labels and tabbed for pre solo, private, IR, etc.
I'm not that tech savvySlacker! I gotta make my own labels!
This is what I'm hoping/planning on doing. I'm at about 190 hours tt. Studying to take the commercial, cfi, agi, and foi writtens by the end of october/beginning of November.
Any suggestions?
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I'm not that tech savvy
You cam print out the endorsements from the aopa website free. Double check they are correct before using them but I did that for my intial and the examiner had no issueSlacker! I gotta make my own labels!
Slacker! I gotta make my own labels!
Do the CFII check ride right away once the CFI stuff is out of the way. Your brain is still in learning mode. Other than that - I definitely suggest you go up with another pilot and fly right seat. It takes some getting used to, especially when it comes to short/soft/regular landings. Steep turns is also a tough one from the right seat.
I didnt have to study for my commercial because whatever you study for CFI is the exact same material - only difference is that you are teaching it, rather than directly answering questions
The more studying and preparing you do at home, the less you deal with the instructor. For CFI material - FAA's airplane flying handbook and PHAK are gold. I also used scott sosha's lesson plans, available for free online - but use whatever your instructor recommends, because I am sure he is adapted to teaching a specific way.