No I did notDid you pass??
LOL Maybe I’m the only one, but I wouldn’t be offended one bit if a DPE said this kind of stuff to me, I’d actually find it quite amusing because it’s so off the wall. Is it appropriate and professional? Not at all, but I also wouldn’t get bent out of shape over it by any means.
Yes and I don’t disagree with that part at all. If this story is true, it is certainly unacceptable.Problem is a DPE represents the FAA while performing his/her duties. And the FAA demands professional conduct by its designees.
There is a time and place for everything. This kind of conduct during a FAA check ride is unacceptable.
LOL Maybe I’m the only one, but I wouldn’t be offended one bit if a DPE said this kind of stuff to me, I’d actually find it quite amusing because it’s so off the wall. Is it appropriate and professional? Not at all, but I also wouldn’t get bent out of shape over it by any means.
Did you pass??
No I did not
Read my reply again. I didn’t find anything about the fact that he failed, to be amusing.Yes, you would be the only one that would be amused to have a grossly unprofessional examiner fail you and tarnish your permanent record after giving him $600 and spending thousands on preparation. Why don't you sign up for a checkride with the guy, then when you fail let us all know how funny it was.
he drew a circling procedure on the board and asked me "Is this a penis, a vagina, or a circling approach?"
This one is legit...the inbound leg timing is one of the criteria that defines the hold, and you have to know how to make that happen.how long to time outbound legs of holds and crab angle to correct for wind to achieve a 1 minute inbound leg time of a hold
a grossly unprofessional examiner fail you and tarnish your permanent record after giving him $600 and spending thousands on preparation.
Please don't edit old posts like this, removing all relevant material. Now nobody has any idea what this entire thread is about.Update: Retook check ride with different examiner and passed
Please don't edit old posts like this, removing all relevant material. Now nobody has any idea what this entire thread is about.
I recently took my instrument rating checkride and I feel that I was given a very unfair oral exam. My school has never used this examiner but he flew down with his friend as our local dpe's were unavailable. The examiner asked me what approach categories were and why the radius increased in size with each category. My answer was that they are based on Vso times 1.3 and the radius is larger because faster planes need a larger radius to be able to make a normal descent with normal maneuvers. He said that my answer wasn't fully correct, I needed to also say that it was so the large planes could also make the required standard rate of turn for downwind to final. He said the same to my instructor as well, and I cannot find where that is stated in any of the textbooks. I was asked to state an exact crab angle for wind corrections when making turns in a traffic pattern. I was also asked for exact distances from the runway when on downwind and turning final for circling approaches and normal traffic pattern (a range was unacceptable), as well as how long to time outbound legs of holds and crab angle to correct for wind to achieve a 1 minute inbound leg time of a hold. These questions took up most of the checkride we did not cover ANY other subject material besides holds and circling procedures. I was ridiculed for not being about to answer to his liking.
I also want to mention his behavior that I found very unprofessional.
I'm posting this because my instructors and I feel that I wasn't given a fair checkride and that he was extremely unprofessional. It's been suggested that I make a complaint to the fsdo. Is that a good idea? How would I even go about this and what can come out of it?
- He was almost 3 hours late to my checkride and the checkride the day prior
- He only communicated with another student about his late arrival despite having both my number and my instructor's number.
- Upon meeting me he commented I shouldn't wear a tie the next day, or wear only a tie.
- He asked me where I grew up when I told him, he asked me if I was inbred and if I thought my sister was "hot"
- During the checkride, he told me he had received a "hate email from the FAA" about a previous checkride he conducted.
- He made several phone calls during my oral exam one of which being to the FAA about the "hate email" he received and told me he was "talking to the only hot and nice woman from the FAA"
- At one point, he drew a circling procedure on the board and asked me "Is this a penis, a vagina, or a circling approach?"
- When I answered his question about approach categories about descending to the runway with "a normal descent using normal maneuvers", he then asked me, "Well, define normal, what's normal to me might not be normal to someone else. For example, gay marriage isn't normal to me but it might be for someone else!"
- He asked me when I was younger if my dad ever got mad at me for taking too long of showers from "wacking off"
- During the checkride, he left the room several times. Later, my instructor relayed to me that the examiner went to go ask the same exam questions to my instructors and fellow students.
- He also used profanity during the exam and the debriefing.
Doesn’t matter to me whether he accepts some responsibility for the bust or not...I’ll assume he didn’t answer everything correctly (and in my prior post I pointed out a couple of areas where his impression of unfairness may have been incorrect). What tells me he probably has valid complaints is the specificity of his statements, but he still needs to go through proper channels for someone to determine whether any action is required.So often when someone fails a ride, the story is, ummm, shall we say, embellished...
Accepting ZERO blame for failing, is tough for me to swallow. I wasn't there, and not saying that there was no fault on the other side as well...but to be such an extremely one sided story makes my spidey senses kick in.
I listened to a guy rant about an examiner who was so unfair, so evil, and impossible to pass with...next week he passed me without any complaints on my multi-ifr ride. A student who won't even accept 10% of the blame, makes it tough for me to not question the story.
Sadly we will likely never hear the accused man's side of the story. I terminated someone yesterday, I bet that when she told her story to family and friends last night, I was made out as the most evil person on earth. Of course they don't care about the truth, and will just forever consider me Satan himself.
I listened to a guy rant about an examiner who was so unfair, so evil, and impossible to pass with...next week he passed me without any complaints on my multi-ifr ride.
But how many examiners accept checks? All I've seen require cash up front.I probably would have walked away if he were 3 hours late, but most definitely if those first few comments came in the first few minutes. Right before I started writing my letter to the fsdo I would have put a stop on the check......
... For my last few years I had a job I would never be in the room with a member of the opposite sex for their protection, and mine - I am pretty good looking, and an amazing conversationalist.
You forgot humble.
I'm really confused. Am I missing a post up front?
Mike1238 said: ↑
I recently took my instrument rating checkride and I feel that I was given a very unfair oral exam. My school has never used this examiner but he flew down with his friend as our local dpe's were unavailable. The examiner asked me what approach categories were and why the radius increased in size with each category. My answer was that they are based on Vso times 1.3 and the radius is larger because faster planes need a larger radius to be able to make a normal descent with normal maneuvers. He said that my answer wasn't fully correct, I needed to also say that it was so the large planes could also make the required standard rate of turn for downwind to final. He said the same to my instructor as well, and I cannot find where that is stated in any of the textbooks. I was asked to state an exact crab angle for wind corrections when making turns in a traffic pattern. I was also asked for exact distances from the runway when on downwind and turning final for circling approaches and normal traffic pattern (a range was unacceptable), as well as how long to time outbound legs of holds and crab angle to correct for wind to achieve a 1 minute inbound leg time of a hold. These questions took up most of the checkride we did not cover ANY other subject material besides holds and circling procedures. I was ridiculed for not being about to answer to his liking.
I also want to mention his behavior that I found very unprofessional.
I'm posting this because my instructors and I feel that I wasn't given a fair checkride and that he was extremely unprofessional. It's been suggested that I make a complaint to the fsdo. Is that a good idea? How would I even go about this and what can come out of it?
- He was almost 3 hours late to my checkride and the checkride the day prior
- He only communicated with another student about his late arrival despite having both my number and my instructor's number.
- Upon meeting me he commented I shouldn't wear a tie the next day, or wear only a tie.
- He asked me where I grew up when I told him, he asked me if I was inbred and if I thought my sister was "hot"
- During the checkride, he told me he had received a "hate email from the FAA" about a previous checkride he conducted.
- He made several phone calls during my oral exam one of which being to the FAA about the "hate email" he received and told me he was "talking to the only hot and nice woman from the FAA"
- At one point, he drew a circling procedure on the board and asked me "Is this a penis, a vagina, or a circling approach?"
- When I answered his question about approach categories about descending to the runway with "a normal descent using normal maneuvers", he then asked me, "Well, define normal, what's normal to me might not be normal to someone else. For example, gay marriage isn't normal to me but it might be for someone else!"
- He asked me when I was younger if my dad ever got mad at me for taking too long of showers from "wacking off"
- During the checkride, he left the room several times. Later, my instructor relayed to me that the examiner went to go ask the same exam questions to my instructors and fellow students.
- He also used profanity during the exam and the debriefing.
Yeah, but it was deleted in an update but reconstituted in post #26:
But how many examiners accept checks? All I've seen require cash up front.
Mine accepted a check. In fact if you failed the oral he said he would only charge you half. I passed and don’t remember giving him a check until it was all said and done.