The primary reason I hate renting is that, inevitably, half the panel is tagged inop, and of the other half, half *is* inop but not tagged. I was really looking forward to owning, at least in part, an airplane that's impeccably maintained and not being beaten to death by students every day. More fool me, I guess.
Get out of the partnership. You now know of a lot more things to consider before you get into anything like this again.
Averse to renting because sometimes some of the instruments are inop? How is that worse than the plane you have where you don't even have the instruments that are sometimes marked inop in the rental?
Note that unless all the named insureds get their instrument rating, it won't really change your premiums. I went through the same thing when I got my rating (Margy has no interest in doing so).
I think it is applicable to your original question. If you don’t want to rent, and can’t do it it your airplane, than the answer is to get a new plane/partnership.Thread creep, it's inevitable. [exaggerated sigh here]
Comments and questions about the partnership, airplane, experience, etc aren't really applicable to my original question: since my airplane is VFR, would it make sense to pursue my instrument rating? Consensus appears to be a no, so I'll go with that.
I'm not sure I'd fly that plane VFR at night , either, without some kind of working backup to GPS.But if other maintenance issues exist, as it sounds like, no way I’d go near an examiner with the airplane.
I'm not sure teaching yourself instrument flying in a home sim is a wise thing to do. The bad habits or incorrect techniques you acquire by not having professional instruction will be counterproductive in the long term. Now once you have the training and or rating, the sim is a wonderful tool in keeping those learned skills fresh. A simulator could also be a valuable/economical tool if used under the supervision of an instrument instructor.Sorry. I might do it, but do it differently. Get a sim that can do IFR, and fly the crap out of it. None of the hours will count, but general consensus seems to be that it'll get your skills and knowledge up, and may be fun as well. Similarly, get an app for a phone/tablet to study for the written, keep going through it until you're in the 90's or wherever you want to be. Then later on, when you have sorted out better access to better equipment, go for it.
The problem is many of us don’t accept your premise so answering the question is moot. I’d make the plane minimally ifr capable, screw what the partners say or find another situation. The ifr isn’t going to help you if the plane breaks down, so why bother with it? Your money and time is far better invested in fixing the aircraft or finding a better situation.Thread creep, it's inevitable. [exaggerated sigh here]
Comments and questions about the partnership, airplane, experience, etc aren't really applicable to my original question: since my airplane is VFR, would it make sense to pursue my instrument rating? Consensus appears to be a no, so I'll go with that.
I put all squawks into 3 categories:I'm the middle-of-the-road (or airway) guy. I don't need a GTN750 driving a GFC-600 to get me from KABC to KXYZ. I enjoy hand-flying and looking out the window. But I'm intolerant of any degree of mechanical defect in any of my vehicles and will happily pay whatever it takes to keep them squawk-free. From conversations with other owners and FBOs, apparently I'm in an extreme minority.
where are you located?The primary reason I hate renting is that, inevitably, half the panel is tagged inop, and of the other half, half *is* inop but not tagged. I was really looking forward to owning, at least in part, an airplane that's impeccably maintained and not being beaten to death by students every day. More fool me, I guess.
You can’t afford to rent to train and pay partnership fees at same time
Please point out exactly where I said I couldn't afford to rent while owning.
Also averse to paying rental fees while paying the monthlies on my own
where are you located?
130 hrs is not much time. It was suggested to me to fly at least 200 hrs and then think about a IFR rating.
Your partners only have 500 hrs after 20-30 years?
I have the Sporty's ground school, been working on it for eight months and still can't nail down the HSI presentation questions. I rage-quit FS20 a few months ago when ATC consistently screwed up vectors to final, aiming me at the center of the airport instead of the fix (plus a metric ton of other stupid bugs).
I started working on my IR immediately after getting my private at 67 hours. My 130 hours is spread out over 20 years due to poverty and illness. You were saying?
Please point out exactly where I said I couldn't afford to rent while owning.
You seem to be a bit bitter. You come here asking for advice, then you seem to act crotchety.Phoenix. How is this relevant?
You seem to be a bit bitter. You come here asking for advice, then you seem to act crotchety.
You seem to be a bit bitter. You come here asking for advice, then you seem to act crotchety.
We don’t ACT.So, he fits right in?!?!
Do you have a working VOR and DG and AI or TC?
You can do a lot of instrument training with that. VOR Approaches, Localizer Approaches, Holding. DME Arc’s Might have simulate a DME with a Handheld GPS or Tablet. You could probably do up to the 30 hour mark of your instrument rating in your airplane, Practice GPS approaches and buttonolgy on something like X-plane. Then rent for 10+ hours to prepare for the checkride in the plane you will take the checkride in.
What does the POA brain trust think about logging VFR practice approaches with something like a simulated DME For currency?
Brian
The OP said neither VOR was working (or I think he actually said they were trashed). An option might be to have an avionics shop (on your dollar, Coinneach) see what it would take to fix the inop indicators. If you had those fixed you could start with your airplane as brcase says and see how it works out.
Just curious...have you looked into any clubs in the area?Phoenix. How is this relevant?
I agree that some of what you learn training for an IR will stick with you for years, but most of it decays fast when you don't use it, much more so than basic stick-and-rudder skills like landing — operating the controls is muscle memory, but an IFR scan is mental discipline.Instrument training can have two very different goals.
Instrument rating, and filing flights in instrument weather.
Or
Acquiring the instrument skills that will keep you alive if un intentional instrument flight occurs.
Instrument training can have two very different goals.
Instrument rating, and filing flights in instrument weather.
Or
Acquiring the instrument skills that will keep you alive if un intentional instrument flight occurs.
The accident files are full of fully-rated and current IFR pilots blundering into IMC while VFR. IR training is about much more than staying upright while escaping a VFR-into-IMC emergency. IR training is overkill for this purpose. One could become proficient in emergency instrument skills without the full monte of training for the IR.
I think you misrepresented what people said. They said that the full instrument rating itself probably won't bring much benefit if you don't stay current, and might even create a false sense of security if you think of it as a get out of jail free card for being more cavalier about the risk of flying into IMC when you're on a VFR flight plan.I think additional training is always a good thing. I don't believe there's any relationship between getting training and a persons overall attitude toward risk changing. Choosing to not learn something because it might give you a false sense of security is a silly argument, in my view. To me, it's an indication that your risk management skills are lousy. Fix that...through training, rather than avoiding learning new things. Maybe I'm being harsh, but it sounds like not wanting to learn math in fear that you might do your taxes wrong.
What type of large or turbine powered multi engine airplane were you flying?I verified with the flashlight, carried in reach, as required by the FAR's