hindsight2020
Final Approach
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2010
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hindsight2020
Good Grief!! And we wonder why we don't have more youth in aviation?
Kid comes on here motivated to fly, and with the exception of about five useful posts all he gets is flack. He gets heckled about his age of graduation, his crappy job, his father, and his financial situation.
Would you feel welcomed into aviation with that attitude?
Reminds me of myself. I sure as hell wasn't debt free when I started flying around his age. And I found the cheapest flight school around.
Probably the best investment I've ever made.
Plus, the best pilots learn the youngest.
It's not about discouraging anybody. I was 18 when I got my PPL and did it in one sitting over the summer of my sophomore year in college. It wasn't until 4 years later and working a similarly crappy job as the OP (as a side job, not my full time occupation) that I funded my instrument ticket and commercial training. It can be done. But the OP is looking for a freebie answer and I'm afraid one doesn't exist shy of having dad pay for it. The fact is no buck, no buck rogers.
Look, if I worked at Sonic past the age I would be receiving a college degree or a vocational certification, I wouldn't be able to own an airplane 13 years later. No amount of passion or waiting for the charity of others would have done that for me, for what amounts to a recreational pursuit no less. Come on now.
My plan was simple back then and it still holds true today. get your ducks in order so as to amass x,xxx before assigning a time period with which to accomplish one's flight training in the least interrupted way possible, which will yield the most efficient way (cheapest) to finish the certificate. Once you get to that point, the DFW area is replete with options. This whole "they don't like me/there's "situations" at xyz airport" sounds sophomoric and not really relevant nor endemic to the discussion of getting from point A to point B of getting a license, but it does speak to the maturity level of the applicant.
Things cost quite a bit more than they did in the year 2000, but it's doable. I'd say $5-6000 is a good goal today, if one researches the part 61 scene aggressively. It may also mean that it's gonna take a little while to get the cash. Those who want it bad will get creative and formulate an economic plan and the fiscal discipline to stay on track. That may hurt a little, *gasp*.
Good luck, but the OP should get his vocational direction in order before postulating about what in the end is a recreational expenditure. Otherwise he'd be pursuing it formally or professionally and at a lot bigger cost.