im1knight
Filing Flight Plan
Hello everyone!
I'm currently a college student studying engineering, with my home in Houston, TX. I'm thinking to obtain a private license, it's one of those things on my "to do" list, and I think I might as well get it done. But I do have a few questions in mind:
1. What is a good school in Houston to do flight training at? (Considering aircraft age, maintenance, instructor quality, etc.) South Houston preferred.
2. I plan to do it over my summer vacation, from mid May-Aug. I will be working an internship M-F, which pays for the lessons as well, so I think my flying time is restricted to the weekends. Is it possible at all to obtain my license within a roughly 3-4 month period flying only on the weekends? (only prior experience is from ~6 years of semi hardcore FSX flying...)
3. School work is extremely busy during the school years, I don't think I will have the time to fly that often. Maybe once every 1-2 months? Are risks of getting rusty pretty high? Is flying kinda like riding a bike/driving a car where once you know it, you don't really ever forget? Or I'm I completely wrong...Any issues with getting the license, then putting it off for awhile, then start flying again when I have the time again? My understanding is the license never expire, and if it's been too long, just get an instructor onboard and practice a few hrs, then pass the biannual check?
4. Type of aircraft to train on? I've looked at two training centers in my area, one is "anson air" and the other is "solo flight training", and I can see i can select between C172, C150, Da40, or Beechcraft skipper... And should I pay a bit more to learn in the G1000 version vs. the analog ones? I know the 6-packs are generally recommended for a new pilot, perhaps I'm just in a different generation at 21 yrs old, but digital information just feels way more natural to me...takes much less time to digest the information, and learning curve for me on electronics are next to none. Or should I really do 6-pack as most plane rental places still use the old 6pack equipped aircraft, so its more convenient? I assume there is no "type rating" involved with whether you can only fly analog or glass depending on the type you trained on?
5. Rental insurance? I know to rent an aircraft you must carry insurance. Is aircraft rental insurance available on case by case basis? Like those collision waivers that car rental places give you? Or must you purchase a yearly plan? If so, what's the premium? I'm afraid it might be rather high for a student pilot, and I'm not sure if it's the same as car insurance where it's connected to the age. Esp. if I don't get to fly much during the school years.
6. Generally speaking, what is the average cost per year to stay "current"? Insurance, rental, fuel, etc...
7. When a flight school provide a quote online, is it normally tax included? Or is tax not collected, since its a tuition type of thing?
8. Other general advises for a newbie?
Sorry, I realize it's a lot of questions, and I really do appreciate helpful answers!
Thank you for the time!!
I'm currently a college student studying engineering, with my home in Houston, TX. I'm thinking to obtain a private license, it's one of those things on my "to do" list, and I think I might as well get it done. But I do have a few questions in mind:
1. What is a good school in Houston to do flight training at? (Considering aircraft age, maintenance, instructor quality, etc.) South Houston preferred.
2. I plan to do it over my summer vacation, from mid May-Aug. I will be working an internship M-F, which pays for the lessons as well, so I think my flying time is restricted to the weekends. Is it possible at all to obtain my license within a roughly 3-4 month period flying only on the weekends? (only prior experience is from ~6 years of semi hardcore FSX flying...)
3. School work is extremely busy during the school years, I don't think I will have the time to fly that often. Maybe once every 1-2 months? Are risks of getting rusty pretty high? Is flying kinda like riding a bike/driving a car where once you know it, you don't really ever forget? Or I'm I completely wrong...Any issues with getting the license, then putting it off for awhile, then start flying again when I have the time again? My understanding is the license never expire, and if it's been too long, just get an instructor onboard and practice a few hrs, then pass the biannual check?
4. Type of aircraft to train on? I've looked at two training centers in my area, one is "anson air" and the other is "solo flight training", and I can see i can select between C172, C150, Da40, or Beechcraft skipper... And should I pay a bit more to learn in the G1000 version vs. the analog ones? I know the 6-packs are generally recommended for a new pilot, perhaps I'm just in a different generation at 21 yrs old, but digital information just feels way more natural to me...takes much less time to digest the information, and learning curve for me on electronics are next to none. Or should I really do 6-pack as most plane rental places still use the old 6pack equipped aircraft, so its more convenient? I assume there is no "type rating" involved with whether you can only fly analog or glass depending on the type you trained on?
5. Rental insurance? I know to rent an aircraft you must carry insurance. Is aircraft rental insurance available on case by case basis? Like those collision waivers that car rental places give you? Or must you purchase a yearly plan? If so, what's the premium? I'm afraid it might be rather high for a student pilot, and I'm not sure if it's the same as car insurance where it's connected to the age. Esp. if I don't get to fly much during the school years.
6. Generally speaking, what is the average cost per year to stay "current"? Insurance, rental, fuel, etc...
7. When a flight school provide a quote online, is it normally tax included? Or is tax not collected, since its a tuition type of thing?
8. Other general advises for a newbie?
Sorry, I realize it's a lot of questions, and I really do appreciate helpful answers!
Thank you for the time!!