Shuswap BC
Pre-takeoff checklist
Im not going to speak for him or his attorney, but I gathered there was some sort of agreement made.
Someone tried to sue me once, they lost, I won my case for legal fees, they owed me $17,000.
Im not going to speak for him or his attorney, but I gathered there was some sort of agreement made.
And the CFI-A gets that instrument time?
Or are you no longer arguing that a CFI is useless without the -A and no reputable flight school would train/use one?
But are you still arguing that you have to have the CFI-A in order to get that instrument time?if he has that time, I see no issue.
But are you still arguing that you have to have the CFI-A in order to get that instrument time?
Ok...so if you’re not responding to my posts, I’d suggest not quoting them.what I am arguing is the typical puppy mill student who gets the II because the A then becomes an add on, which is where this thread started.
I get it, some folks may not want to teach others to fly but are ok with teaching pilots to fly instruments...
That was fun just to read, thank you!Some just enjoy it, they love to fly, share their vast experience, make their own hours, be home every night, and not a glorified bus driver like an airline pilot is. They can buy their own plane, or work with people who already own like myself. I pay her $50/hour, which is significantly more than the average working stiff makes. She owns a 172, but is more than happy to fly with me and others in whatever we own. Occasionally over the years, I have flown to her home airport, parked whatever I owned at the time, opting to get in some 172 time in her plane. She has social skill, experience, and common sense that nobody despite their designation has at age 19 to 24 which is the common instructor. Don't tell me about what the book says to do when icing up, tell me what you did the dozens of times you experienced it yourself. Dead stick to 1500 feet of grass should not even make the instructor sweat, but just fly with a smile, come in slightly high, add a side slip to scrub the last bit of altitude and straighten out at 30' agl and plop it down like it was a walk in the park. Mountain flying is nothing at all, just another normal day, as is the landing on a beach beside some lake. Perfectly flat lake landing is so smooth, or windy day with chop and a tricky taxi to the dock with waves slapping the floats and winds pushing the plane are all handled in stride. IFR in actual IFR is just the regular flight for them, not just 50 hours of hood time in severe clear. By the time I got my commercial I was a way better pilot than one of the instructors was at the school. We all have to make our own choices in life, look for a true teacher, and focus less on some letters in a log book. And you young people who are out there learning to fly, remember that instructor is not your boss, you're paying his salary, so speak up and make suggestions. If your airport has a short, infrequently used runway, with a nice crosswind happening while your going to fly, request it....not that fancy 80' wide by 5,000' long paved monstrosity that has a head wind, which teaches you nothing. A dozen touch and goes on the crosswind 2,100' runway is actually teaching you something. When time to do your solo xc, ask to pick your own destinations, make it an all day adventure, it requires a fuel stop, and a place to eat lunch, beautiful scenery, and when you land back at home days end you just added 6 or 7 hours to your log book. I requested my own xc, it was granted....i logged 7.2 hours, had a fabulous lunch, and fondly remember it still 31 years later. It was a 4 stop day, I got fuel twice because I would rather have more than enough. Sat out on a patio eating a burger, drinking a milkshake watching others come and go. Flew over a beautiful lake, remember watching the boaters and people water skiing, I dropped into slow flight so I would have more time to take it all in because I was only doing 60 knots and dragging flaps. One of my stops was 1800 feet of runway and it was crosswind that day, both ends mean if you screwed up there was no area to roll out into, just water to swim in after you crashed through the 4' tall fence. Be your own advocate and choose to make yourself a better pilot. If an airport is not too busy, when the tower gives you some instructions, say no, and ask for your choice. They are an advisory, not God, and 99.9% of the time they are happy to grant you your wish on a slow day. If they say use 15, ask for 23 instead, ultimately you are responsible for your own education, it doesn't matter if you are becoming a truck driver, surgeon, or pilot.
That was fun just to read, thank you!
Has anyone done their CFII prior to doing their CFI? This essentially makes the initial CFI an Add-on. I guess a lot of the big 141s do this but I was kinda shocked that it was a thing but I guess it makes sense. I can get my Commercial Multi with a single add-on if I really wanted...
I get it, some folks may not want to teach others to fly but are ok with teaching pilots to fly instruments...
I've thought about getting a CFII for that very reason. I don't want to teach anybody to fly from scratch, but I wouldn't mind teaching instruments.
What about the guy that wants an IPC and a flight review at the same time? Or a flight review and to knock the rust off?
I haven't looked it up. But can a CFII only do a flight review? If not, this is fairly limiting.
What about commercial training, complex/hp endorsements or general checkouts in "new to them" aircraft?
There is more out there than Private pilot candidates.
Still not worth another oral/checkride/studying to me. I know a couple of people with only a CFII and with their own plane that stay booked doing an accelerated instrument rating once or twice a month and IPCs. If I got it that’s what I’d shoot for.
<snippet>...come in slightly high, add a side slip to scrub the last bit of altitude and straighten out at 30' agl...
My instructor is also suggesting I do cfii before cfi. The reason being the material of cfi will be a little easier as an add on.