This is purely a hypothetical. Let's say you are not a pilot and you win the lotto. And you want to buy a Cirrus Vision Jet. Money is no object. Would you:
1) Buy and learn to fly and then get your hours in a Cirrus SR22T then get a Vision Jet? If so how many hours would you need in order to qualify for the Vision Jet type rating? (The thinking here is that you start off in the Cirrus and learn to control that vs progressing to it)
2) Learn to fly in a 172/182, then transition to the SR22T?
3) Why learn to fly at all...hire a pilot!
Again, just a hypothetical. I was just wondering if this could be done and what timeframe it would take.
I would probably go zero to hero in the jet. Who wants a plane with the wheels hanging out in the breeze all the time? That's just embarrassing.
But seriously... One of the things Cirrus used to take a lot of flak for was that they were selling SR-22s to non-pilots... And those same kinds of people wanted their investment to pay off right away without having to wait for all that pesky training to be over.
Cirrus' answer to it was
Cirrus Access. At the highest level, which I think cost something like $60K (which included your insurance), you got a full-time CSIP instructor dedicated to you for a year. The idea was that that the instructor could double as your corporate pilot and you could use it for business travel right off the bat. Solo would not even be allowed until the student had at least 50 hours to remove the pressure that many new pilots feel. At the end of the year, you would have 250 hours, private and instrument, and lots of good real-world experience.
Something similar to that would work with the Vision jet as well, though it might take even more time.
Because it’s probably a really lousy trainer...
And who would want to beat up on a multi million dollar jet?
Meh, it's only a Cirrus jet.
And can you get a type rating simultaneous to a private?
Yep. It's rare, for obvious reasons, but it can be done. I think Thurman Munson did it, before the infamous crash...
If money is no object why on earth would you want to buy a Cirrus jet?
When you could have one of these instead...
View attachment 71927
Who would want a jet where you are required to get someone else to go flying with you rather than going yourself on a whim?
Seriously, if money was no object, I would get a Pilatus PC24. Single pilot, and the largest cabin on a single-pilot jet, giant cargo door, can operate off a 3000-foot grass strip, has the pseudo-APU functionality... It's really a new level in aircraft design IMO.