RussR
En-Route
"Train in the airplane you plan to fly"
I wanted to talk about this a little bit. While I can understand why this seems appealing, I wanted to point out some significant negatives to this approach.
- "you plan to fly" - what, forever? Plans change of course, we never know where things will take us.
- I know a guy who built an airplane, learned to fly in it, and has only flown it since. He has flown no other airplanes of any sort. He may be competent in that airplane, but certainly I wouldn't call him a "well-rounded aviator". He has no depth of experience to pull from in event of some unusual situation.
- A personal example - at the flight school where I learned to fly, it was a fleet of 1970's - 1980's 172s. BUT nothing was standardized. They had different radios, some were in mph, some in knots, different audio panels, some had 40 deg of flaps, some 30, some with the momentary flap lever, some with the "pre-select" lever, etc. I flew whatever was available. Rather than being a stumbling block, it taught me to be aware of the plane I was flying in, be able to operate the different systems, and not assume that all airplanes are alike. This taught me far more about the operation of different systems than I realized at the time - I see people struggle with things like audio panels because they've only ever used one model and don't have the "big picture" of what it's doing.
- A pilot who has only flown one airplane will likely have only one view of how things are to be done, and assume this applies to all airplanes. I imagine this would only be made worse by the very well-standardized Cirrus training regimen and procedures.
- There is a great case study provided by the AOPA ASF as part of their "Transitioning to new airplanes" course. Direct link: https://www.aopa.org/lms/courses/transitioning/#3e-sideways&08-a-simple-mistake . This is a great example of what I'm talking about and just happens to involved a pilot who did his training in an SR-20 (although this type of thing could happen in any airplane). He then rented a 172, and had a few hours of training in it. Due to the differences in flap lever operation and takeoff setting for the flaps, he ended up taking off with full flaps in the 172, couldn't climb out, and crashed off the end of the runway, killing all onboard. While the cause of the crash is obvious, the "why" goes back to negative transfer of learning - he lapsed into what he knew with the Cirrus, and forgot the different procedures in the Cessna. His experience was very limited and, in my opinion, he didn't have enough varied experience to fall back on, to realize that "all planes are different, I need to be careful and make sure to double-check some things".
- The more different airplanes I fly, the more I realize that each type has their idiosyncrasies that demand attention. A pilot with experience in only one model may not understand or appreciate this when getting into something else. Most FBO checkouts I've had are woefully inadequate, basically consisting of "can you takeoff and land a few times in a row without bending the airplane" and not going into any great detail on the systems, likely because a) the CFIs don't take time to understand the pilot's previous experience, and b) the pilot doesn't want to pay more than they absolutely have to.
If the OP does his private pilot training in a Cessna or Piper, and then transitions to the Cirrus, he will then have experience in twice the types of aircraft that he would have had otherwise. I think this is a good thing. Or, heck, maybe even just solo in the Cessna or Piper, then transition - that's not a bad plan either (IMO).
I wanted to talk about this a little bit. While I can understand why this seems appealing, I wanted to point out some significant negatives to this approach.
- "you plan to fly" - what, forever? Plans change of course, we never know where things will take us.
- I know a guy who built an airplane, learned to fly in it, and has only flown it since. He has flown no other airplanes of any sort. He may be competent in that airplane, but certainly I wouldn't call him a "well-rounded aviator". He has no depth of experience to pull from in event of some unusual situation.
- A personal example - at the flight school where I learned to fly, it was a fleet of 1970's - 1980's 172s. BUT nothing was standardized. They had different radios, some were in mph, some in knots, different audio panels, some had 40 deg of flaps, some 30, some with the momentary flap lever, some with the "pre-select" lever, etc. I flew whatever was available. Rather than being a stumbling block, it taught me to be aware of the plane I was flying in, be able to operate the different systems, and not assume that all airplanes are alike. This taught me far more about the operation of different systems than I realized at the time - I see people struggle with things like audio panels because they've only ever used one model and don't have the "big picture" of what it's doing.
- A pilot who has only flown one airplane will likely have only one view of how things are to be done, and assume this applies to all airplanes. I imagine this would only be made worse by the very well-standardized Cirrus training regimen and procedures.
- There is a great case study provided by the AOPA ASF as part of their "Transitioning to new airplanes" course. Direct link: https://www.aopa.org/lms/courses/transitioning/#3e-sideways&08-a-simple-mistake . This is a great example of what I'm talking about and just happens to involved a pilot who did his training in an SR-20 (although this type of thing could happen in any airplane). He then rented a 172, and had a few hours of training in it. Due to the differences in flap lever operation and takeoff setting for the flaps, he ended up taking off with full flaps in the 172, couldn't climb out, and crashed off the end of the runway, killing all onboard. While the cause of the crash is obvious, the "why" goes back to negative transfer of learning - he lapsed into what he knew with the Cirrus, and forgot the different procedures in the Cessna. His experience was very limited and, in my opinion, he didn't have enough varied experience to fall back on, to realize that "all planes are different, I need to be careful and make sure to double-check some things".
- The more different airplanes I fly, the more I realize that each type has their idiosyncrasies that demand attention. A pilot with experience in only one model may not understand or appreciate this when getting into something else. Most FBO checkouts I've had are woefully inadequate, basically consisting of "can you takeoff and land a few times in a row without bending the airplane" and not going into any great detail on the systems, likely because a) the CFIs don't take time to understand the pilot's previous experience, and b) the pilot doesn't want to pay more than they absolutely have to.
If the OP does his private pilot training in a Cessna or Piper, and then transitions to the Cirrus, he will then have experience in twice the types of aircraft that he would have had otherwise. I think this is a good thing. Or, heck, maybe even just solo in the Cessna or Piper, then transition - that's not a bad plan either (IMO).