I'm in New York and I go to a state school. Tuition is cheap and my parents are helping out with flying. What do you want to do eventually? Fly for the airlines?Can i ask how you managed no debt? and i was going to get a degree in something else as well as aviation. I would be double majoring. not entirely sure in what yet but still getting two degrees. It's a toss up between Aviation maintenance, atc, computer science, or law enforcement.
I bought my 2006 SR 20 from western michigan. Paid 160K, sold it in the crappy market at 157k
I bought my 2006 SR 20 from western michigan. Paid 160K, sold it in the crappy market at 157k
If money is an issue go to an in state school or even the local community college. It will save you a lot of money and just fly on the side like I'm goingI'm in Chicago so I have out of state tuition. I'm not sure. I think air lines. Or someone's ***** and fly their jet for them.
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You might not get over it. Lots of kids come running home from college going from city to sticks doesn't help the odds.Money isn't a big issue. I'm just trying to make a decision on which college to go to. I'm not too fond of leaving a big city and going 14 hours away to a rural town but ill get over it
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Differential Equqtions and Thermal Dynamics
Overpriced and worse overstructured. Plus most of those schools are miserable sausage factories. Now we all want to be mature and pretend that doesn't matter, but it does. I wonder if there is a college administrator handbook with a chapter on gimmicking up failing colleges by adding a flight program?Why no college flight program?
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The aviation programs do not return on investment compared to a state university and flying on your own.
Um ... that would be differential equations and thermodynamics. I hated diff, aced thermo. Came out with a BS-Physics 47 years ago, practiced as a microwave engineer ever since and never used diff and about 1% of the thermo.
Jim
Western michigan is a state university.
And what about the fact that if he goes through an university program he can get his atp @ 1000 hours instead of 1500 with the new regs
And you now know why I did not obtain an engineering degree.....
Those two classes are the gatekeeping classes for Engineering.
Just like Calculus is for Business degrees.
And Organic Chem for Biology degrees....
Not every one can get past some of the gates, no matter how much money they spend and time trying to get a degree.
The more shortcuts, the better pilot????
Hmmmmmm......
Are 1,000 hour pilot academy kids getting hired for jobs requiring an ATP in significant numbers? What about in four years? Extra 500 hours is six months instructing at a busy airport, not a big deal.
having the extra 500 hours doesn't mean that someone is a better pilot. It's the quality of the flight instruction and pilot not the time.
There are other types of flying with far better pay than the airlines, and the minimums are 500 hours.
I'm not saying it doesn't mean anything but just bc someone has a lot of hours doesn't mean they are a good pilot
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Do tell..?
Do you mean banner towing, CFIing and pipeline?
Hours=experience
Experience=skill
I agree with you that it is *what* the hours consist of that makes you a well-rounded pilot. The problem is you can't put "hire me I'm a good pilot even though I don't have many hours" on a resume. You will get a lot more hours in a 150 and have many more interesting experiences along the way.
no you can't but there used to be a guy that kept his cirrus in the hanger with my flight school and he was a complete idiot of a pilot. He would fly his family into convective sigmets. and he was not ifr rated. just because you have a lot of hours or experience does not necessarily mean they are a good pilot. if you have 20,000 hours but your a dumbass who puts yourself and others into dangerous situations i dont consider that a good pilot.
That being said i'm not trying to fight you on it. generally speaking yes experience does mean more skill. but if you spend that extra 500 hours flying in circles i dont know how much skill you will acquire.