Similar to the “where are you training” question: what kind of airport, towered or pilot controlled?
I train at a very busy Class Delta (ie towered) airport in Atlanta. I flew my solo cross country yesterday and from start up to take off took almost 40 minutes due to traffic volume at the airport, and then I left on my 2 hour round trip. The Hobbs meter was clicking the whole time I was sitting in the conga line waiting my turn to take off. My cross country was to a small, quiet, pilot controlled airport in TN. Leaving there to come back home most definitely didn’t involve just sitting on the ground waiting my turn to take off for 40 minutes.
Point is this - if you’re training at a busy airport you’ll burn plenty of money just sitting on the ground. Yesterday’s departure delay was long but not unheard of for my home airport. It’s another reason people are telling you that a check ride in 40 hours is unlikely.
I started flight training 18 years ago when I was a 16 year old cashier at Target. I made $7.15 an hour and saved like hell to pay for one hour in a Cessna 150. Fast forward to now and things are different. The wait sucked but the fire doesn’t go out. The people telling you to save $10k are giving you good advice - flying is expensive. I’ve probably spent $2k in January alone. If flying is really in your blood (and it must be to save $5k as a high schooler - good for you!!), waiting until your finances catch up with your dreams will not be that much of a set back over long term. Keep at it.
I train at a very busy Class Delta (ie towered) airport in Atlanta. I flew my solo cross country yesterday and from start up to take off took almost 40 minutes due to traffic volume at the airport, and then I left on my 2 hour round trip. The Hobbs meter was clicking the whole time I was sitting in the conga line waiting my turn to take off. My cross country was to a small, quiet, pilot controlled airport in TN. Leaving there to come back home most definitely didn’t involve just sitting on the ground waiting my turn to take off for 40 minutes.
Point is this - if you’re training at a busy airport you’ll burn plenty of money just sitting on the ground. Yesterday’s departure delay was long but not unheard of for my home airport. It’s another reason people are telling you that a check ride in 40 hours is unlikely.
I started flight training 18 years ago when I was a 16 year old cashier at Target. I made $7.15 an hour and saved like hell to pay for one hour in a Cessna 150. Fast forward to now and things are different. The wait sucked but the fire doesn’t go out. The people telling you to save $10k are giving you good advice - flying is expensive. I’ve probably spent $2k in January alone. If flying is really in your blood (and it must be to save $5k as a high schooler - good for you!!), waiting until your finances catch up with your dreams will not be that much of a set back over long term. Keep at it.