“I started training, it was a bad experience, and I want to start again from scratch with no assumptions that I know anything.”I actually thought about doing this and was very close to tossing my logbook into the fireplace one night, but how do you explain already having a student pilot cert that as issued in May?
“I started training, it was a bad experience, and I want to start again from scratch with no assumptions that I know anything.”
And if they ask what was so bad?
And if they ask what was so bad?
“That’s not something I feel is appropriate to discuss here, and would only serve to cause you to assume I have knowledge that I don’t want you to assume. Do you want to continue, or should I look elsewhere?”And if they ask what was so bad?
Soooo, came for thoughts, got the thoughts, and edited out all of the original content. What's that about? This thread overall strikes as very helpful for you and other students that are discouraged by life, by training, by the je nai se quoi. Why would you remove that and not help others?
All the redacted content gives me a clue.
Dunning-Kruger or troll?
Dunning-Kruger or troll?
Well, D-K may not be real, but trolls are, so.....
https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/critical-thinking/dunning-kruger-effect-probably-not-real
I look at this a bit differently. Our syllabus is not geared toward early solo. In fact, we don't start spending a lot of time in traffic patterns until lesson 16. I do teach landings starting with lesson 2, but that is just one or two at the end of the lesson.
What I have discovered is that it is not the number of hours, necessarily, but it can be looked at as the number of landings. Most of my students have made at least 80 landings before they solo, and these are at three or four different airports.
The Air Force focused on us soloing in less than 10 hours, but they were trying to eliminate students who were unlikely to succeed. And they were successful.
That's interesting. I consolidated the data when putting it into MFB, so I'd have to dig out the old book to know for sure, but it looks like I was around 80-90 when I soloed.I look at this a bit differently. Our syllabus is not geared toward early solo. In fact, we don't start spending a lot of time in traffic patterns until lesson 16. I do teach landings starting with lesson 2, but that is just one or two at the end of the lesson.
What I have discovered is that it is not the number of hours, necessarily, but it can be looked at as the number of landings. Most of my students have made at least 80 landings before they solo, and these are at three or four different airports.
The Air Force focused on us soloing in less than 10 hours, but they were trying to eliminate students who were unlikely to succeed. And they were successful.
The Air Force focused on us soloing in less than 10 hours, but they were trying to eliminate students who were unlikely to succeed. And they were successful.
I look at this a bit differently. Our syllabus is not geared toward early solo. In fact, we don't start spending a lot of time in traffic patterns until lesson 16. I do teach landings starting with lesson 2, but that is just one or two at the end of the lesson.
What I have discovered is that it is not the number of hours, necessarily, but it can be looked at as the number of landings. Most of my students have made at least 80 landings before they solo, and these are at three or four different airports.
The Air Force focused on us soloing in less than 10 hours, but they were trying to eliminate students who were unlikely to succeed. And they were successful.
16 flights before even starting landing practice seems excessive to me as a syllabus plan, just on the surface anyway...but I guess it doesn't really matter work on landings or work on navigation, either way it all ends up at the same place in the end I suppose
You made me look -- 181 landings before solo. I should have just moved on apparently. (Too bad I had already bought the ruddy thing)
It was in a Beech Sundowner and with a brand new CFI, so perhaps some caution was warranted.
10th entry; 16.2hrs, 41 landings.…Solo was my 12th log entry...
But then again, it took me about 4000 tries to get landings down.
Well, D-K may not be real, but trolls are, so.....
https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/critical-thinking/dunning-kruger-effect-probably-not-real