afterburner10986
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2023
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afterburner10986
Sorry for this pretty big post and I'll try to breakdown everything up until now. Using a burner account as well as I'm embarrassed for how long things are taking. Looking for advice, even if it's "I'm not built for this" (even call me an idiot if you have to) but for the love of god I'm really lost and would like some guidance.
I started flight training around the start of October 2022 (by this time I had completed my written exam, had gotten 88%) and around 30 hours I completed my first stage check (demonstrating stalls/steep turns as well as how to fly the plane) and the instructor I had went up with said I had done well (although at the time I was a bit concerned how lengthy it took to get there, I tried not to pay it any mind.)
Skip to now, I'm reaching close to 100 hours and don't even feel remotely close to solo-ing. After the first stage check, we had started prepping to solo and got to work on landing (haven't landed before then.) and up until 70-ish hours did I really start getting the feel of how to land, and even then it was only good for getting the plane back down and I still need to work on holding centerline/adding necessary back pressure on touchdown. Even things like proper aileron + rudder correction input on takeoff/landing I'll miss here and there and it'll feel as if I've never progressed at all.
Alongside this, my CFI also tells me that I understand my emergency procedures, but in practice when he pulls the engine out he says my decision making is poor. I understand the ABC checklist as well as restart/shutdown procedures, but when it comes to picking a point to land on is where my instructor tells me I fall flat/rush too much in. For reference, we fly along a beach, and I'd have to choose a point to land abeam of and I'll either over/undershoot the point and he'd get frustrated and we'd restart and try again.
Around the 80 hour mark I had flown with another CFI to see where the issue is/if the problem is me and we went and did some touch-and-go's, and by the end of it he had told me besides a few mistakes (such as the ones earlier like holding centerline, also said I was riding brakes and that was his biggest complaint) I was ready to solo. After, I had taken my second phase check and that CFI said I was ready to go solo as well, and I just needed to work on my ground knowledge + a few things I missed in flight, and that its up to my CFI to make the decision for me to go.
I'll admit when I had started my training I was lacking in my study habits, and for the past few months I've really been striving to make the most of my free time dedicated to studying, but now it feels as if I am at a complete standstill with my training, and all the chair-flying and ground work I'm throwing at isn't enough no matter how much I work. Sometimes it also feels as if I don't actually know the information, just where to look and in flight subconsciously I'll be inputting the right control(s) but in reality I'm either missing them or doing too much, and I'm not making any corrections for it. (My CFI agrees.) We had also have had many talks discussing progression/how to handle it, and come to terms with it being a confidence issue, lack of breathing, and poor decision making (as well as maybe a lack of studying seen from the CFI), and even discussed how maybe his teaching could change to be more optimized for me.
I'm at a complete loss to how to salvage this. On days where I feel like I'm putting in good work my instructor tells me I've committed to poor decisions and put the flight at risk, and I'm starting to get worried how far this'll extend in my career. I still have a love for flying despite the length it's taking and really want to work towards fixing this problem of me "subconsciously committing to poor decisions," but I am also willing to listen to the truth of this issue and would like to hear anyone out.
I started flight training around the start of October 2022 (by this time I had completed my written exam, had gotten 88%) and around 30 hours I completed my first stage check (demonstrating stalls/steep turns as well as how to fly the plane) and the instructor I had went up with said I had done well (although at the time I was a bit concerned how lengthy it took to get there, I tried not to pay it any mind.)
Skip to now, I'm reaching close to 100 hours and don't even feel remotely close to solo-ing. After the first stage check, we had started prepping to solo and got to work on landing (haven't landed before then.) and up until 70-ish hours did I really start getting the feel of how to land, and even then it was only good for getting the plane back down and I still need to work on holding centerline/adding necessary back pressure on touchdown. Even things like proper aileron + rudder correction input on takeoff/landing I'll miss here and there and it'll feel as if I've never progressed at all.
Alongside this, my CFI also tells me that I understand my emergency procedures, but in practice when he pulls the engine out he says my decision making is poor. I understand the ABC checklist as well as restart/shutdown procedures, but when it comes to picking a point to land on is where my instructor tells me I fall flat/rush too much in. For reference, we fly along a beach, and I'd have to choose a point to land abeam of and I'll either over/undershoot the point and he'd get frustrated and we'd restart and try again.
Around the 80 hour mark I had flown with another CFI to see where the issue is/if the problem is me and we went and did some touch-and-go's, and by the end of it he had told me besides a few mistakes (such as the ones earlier like holding centerline, also said I was riding brakes and that was his biggest complaint) I was ready to solo. After, I had taken my second phase check and that CFI said I was ready to go solo as well, and I just needed to work on my ground knowledge + a few things I missed in flight, and that its up to my CFI to make the decision for me to go.
I'll admit when I had started my training I was lacking in my study habits, and for the past few months I've really been striving to make the most of my free time dedicated to studying, but now it feels as if I am at a complete standstill with my training, and all the chair-flying and ground work I'm throwing at isn't enough no matter how much I work. Sometimes it also feels as if I don't actually know the information, just where to look and in flight subconsciously I'll be inputting the right control(s) but in reality I'm either missing them or doing too much, and I'm not making any corrections for it. (My CFI agrees.) We had also have had many talks discussing progression/how to handle it, and come to terms with it being a confidence issue, lack of breathing, and poor decision making (as well as maybe a lack of studying seen from the CFI), and even discussed how maybe his teaching could change to be more optimized for me.
I'm at a complete loss to how to salvage this. On days where I feel like I'm putting in good work my instructor tells me I've committed to poor decisions and put the flight at risk, and I'm starting to get worried how far this'll extend in my career. I still have a love for flying despite the length it's taking and really want to work towards fixing this problem of me "subconsciously committing to poor decisions," but I am also willing to listen to the truth of this issue and would like to hear anyone out.