The plan is just a touch and go at STL on the way to SUS. It was also suggested a few months back by someone in ATC who was very nice and helpful when I first flew into the St Louis area. I just didn't want to go to SUS at the time.
So, why not land at STL Downtown (CPS) instead? you still get to play in Bravo airspace, you still get another control tower experience and, if it's at night, you'll get to play with an MALSR lighting system (granted not quite as flashy as Lambert's ALSF2 lights) BUT, you won't take a chance of screwing with the big boys.**
Or, land at Springfield (SPI) on the way down. Class charlie, relatively busy, nice big airfield.
Or land at both Springfield AND Downtown!
There have been dozens of discussions regarding FLIBs using Bravo airports on this board and there will never be a consensus. But, put me squarely in the camp of---with rare exception---there is absolutely no reason for it. We have plenty of other options and landing at a bravo for training offers no advantage over landing at a charlie that I can think of.
And don't even get me started on FLIBs landing at Bravos just to "notch that one in their logbook".
BTW. if you want a real high stress challenge, go out an play at Rockford (if their controllers still have the same attitude that they did 3 to 5 years ago anyway). I used to fly through RFD's airspace twice a week and I never heard as may stressed out calls from student pilots anywhere else I ever flew. The approach controllers at RFD were brutal to students.
Maybe this was worked out in advance with the instructors but I doubt it. More likely they didn't want training flights in their airspace and did everything possible to make a student's life difficult. I once heard a student in a Citation brought to tears, literally, and it was a male. That's an experience will toughen your nut!
Tim
**There may only be a slight chance of screwing with the big boys but there's still that chance.
There are exceptions of course, like nighttime at many fields being slow, at MCI which is dead almost all the time, etc. But as a general rule of thumb, I think it's a arrogant egocentric move.
But that's just me. Others disagree completely.