Betmerick
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- Joined
- Sep 24, 2014
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Betmerick
I have experience with both companies and will share some personal experiences. I just passed my checkride so I'm free to speak.
First I signed up with Iflyifr whose based in Conn. They send a pilot to you so you are in familiar surroundings and your own plane. You are responsible for his travel and lodging expenses. I lucked out because one of their guys lived in my hometown so I saved those fees. The part that didn't work was the instructor didn't allot me the days that we agreed upon. The basis of accelerated (in my opinion) is to train you for the checkride and nothing else. To give me a few days here, a 2 week break, a few more days, another break, etc. was useless for me. Also I had some old guy (Walter) that seemed like he didn't even want to be there. He bitched on how my 182 was equipped and was pretty argumentative. The day of the checkride it was evident that I was not prepared/qualified to take it. When the DPE said "lets do an arc" and I replied WTF is an arc...... he ended the checkride.
I took a break from training as it left a sour taste in my mouth. When I got re-interested again I signed up with IFR6. I got my plane to Charleston and started the 6 day course. On day 1 the instructor and I went on a joyride around the coastline. I was ready for some hard-hitting IFR work but day 1 was just fluff. We didn't do much the rest of the week other than 2.5 hours of approaches in overcrowded small airports aptly named "the wild west" where radio calls were few and far between. We broke off more approaches than completed. My biggest beef was that I was using a different vision limiting device and was having problems with the course and glideslope needles. Instead of the instructor taking the initiative to introduce power settings or other attitude flying techniques he just let me continue to fail until I got so frustrated that I parked my plane and went home.
I truly feel that for most to succeed in this method of accelerated IFR training is to be well on your way in training and they just "close" you to pass the checkride. To be a green IFR student this does not work!
First I signed up with Iflyifr whose based in Conn. They send a pilot to you so you are in familiar surroundings and your own plane. You are responsible for his travel and lodging expenses. I lucked out because one of their guys lived in my hometown so I saved those fees. The part that didn't work was the instructor didn't allot me the days that we agreed upon. The basis of accelerated (in my opinion) is to train you for the checkride and nothing else. To give me a few days here, a 2 week break, a few more days, another break, etc. was useless for me. Also I had some old guy (Walter) that seemed like he didn't even want to be there. He bitched on how my 182 was equipped and was pretty argumentative. The day of the checkride it was evident that I was not prepared/qualified to take it. When the DPE said "lets do an arc" and I replied WTF is an arc...... he ended the checkride.
I took a break from training as it left a sour taste in my mouth. When I got re-interested again I signed up with IFR6. I got my plane to Charleston and started the 6 day course. On day 1 the instructor and I went on a joyride around the coastline. I was ready for some hard-hitting IFR work but day 1 was just fluff. We didn't do much the rest of the week other than 2.5 hours of approaches in overcrowded small airports aptly named "the wild west" where radio calls were few and far between. We broke off more approaches than completed. My biggest beef was that I was using a different vision limiting device and was having problems with the course and glideslope needles. Instead of the instructor taking the initiative to introduce power settings or other attitude flying techniques he just let me continue to fail until I got so frustrated that I parked my plane and went home.
I truly feel that for most to succeed in this method of accelerated IFR training is to be well on your way in training and they just "close" you to pass the checkride. To be a green IFR student this does not work!