I am looking for something that can help with increasing my comfort level with the instruments, yoke, rudder pedals and throttle. Lead a busy work life and airport is not close so spending money on rental hours instead is not an option. Not looking for a entry level (cheaply made or old) simulator, but willing to spend up 10K to secure a decent one that has been lightly used. Would prefer one with side monitors for more realistic visuals, and sitting in a position more like flying would be a bonus; but a really decent desktop (well under 10K) would be considered.
Also looking for any feedback on what simulators others found useful for training (single engine through instrument rated).
I'm a Sport Pilot student. I use X-Plane 11 with a Saitek yoke, rudder pedals, and throttle quadrant run off a Dell laptop onto a flat screen TV. I used it initially as a glorified 'chair flight' system; getting used to flying the pattern, setting RPMs, maintaining altitude, etc. It helped a ton.
I haven't tried things like stalls or slips so I can't tell you how accurate those are. I fly E/G airspace so I haven't played with the ATC functions.
I'm currently using it to pre-fly my checkride. It's at an airport I've never been to and I want to run the flight from different runways and try and get my climb-out, checkpoints and landmarks dialed in. The actual scenery is not likely to be correct but major roads and intermediate runways are (and I'm using several runways as landmarks). My hope is that this will make the actual checkride flight easier.
Total cost for the gear (I had the laptop so I'm not counting that) was around $500 with works out to 2 or 3 hours plane/CFI rental so I figure it's not a bad investment.
Downsides:
I fly a Skycatcher and there aren't many good models for the plane. I found one but the avionics package is different from my actual plane. It's good enough for what I'm doing but would drive me nuts if I wanted to learn the actual avionics. If you fly something more popular...not an issue.
Skycatcher has a stick/stoke rather than a yoke but I just use my left hand on the Saitek yoke. I had to define buttons and switches for things like flaps that are, in the 'Catcher, levers. No big deal for what I'm doing.
It is hard to keep the plane straight on the runway and landing is a b...ear...the visuals and feel are so very different from actual flying that I find those phases helpful but not a ton.
The TV screen res is not the best so some of the instruments are difficult to see. An actual big monitor would make a difference but not enough for me to spring for the cost.