Flyhound
Pre-takeoff checklist
Use of the rating also depends on where you live. I got my IR when I lived in Seattle, and I used it a lot! Many of my flights were in the muck all the way, and I was able to fly a lot more often with the rating than would have been possible without it.
Then I moved to New Mexico. I never used my IR there. If conditions were IFR it was due to violent thunderstorms and no rating makes flying a small plane viable under those conditions.
Now I live in the DC area and the SFRA surrounding DC means filling IFR makes life a lot easier when operating to, or from airports within the SFRA area.
So, there are many advantages to having the rating, but how you use it can change a lot depending on where you live and where you fly.
For what it is worth, I don't like flying IFR in my current plane. I fly a Maule with steam gauges and no autopilot. Flying IFR requires a lot of concentration with the plane and panel I currently have and that can be exhausting on a long flight. I still keep up on my skills though be sure they make me a more precise pilot. The same can be said for flying a taildragger.
Then I moved to New Mexico. I never used my IR there. If conditions were IFR it was due to violent thunderstorms and no rating makes flying a small plane viable under those conditions.
Now I live in the DC area and the SFRA surrounding DC means filling IFR makes life a lot easier when operating to, or from airports within the SFRA area.
So, there are many advantages to having the rating, but how you use it can change a lot depending on where you live and where you fly.
For what it is worth, I don't like flying IFR in my current plane. I fly a Maule with steam gauges and no autopilot. Flying IFR requires a lot of concentration with the plane and panel I currently have and that can be exhausting on a long flight. I still keep up on my skills though be sure they make me a more precise pilot. The same can be said for flying a taildragger.