Hi all! Thanks for the replies.
What are you going to fly after you get the rating/
I plan to continue my training to ATP.
student myself, but talk to instructors in person, go for what feels right, if someone rubs you wrong go with the other. but I have always had bad mileage performance vehicles, but always had a motorcycle for mileage. but I would prefer older Cherokee, but the instructor is still the determining factor.
I've heard good things about the main CFI at school B, know nothing about the CFI's at school A since they don't even open for business until Aug 1.
I'd say no "simulator" is always a negative in instrument training. The fact that school B doesn't even have one would concern me. Are they the type that tries to teach everything while you're in the airplane? That would indicate to me an "old school" mentality and a "hard knocks" approach to teaching. Ask to go over their syllabus and see how structured their program is. And here's another red flag: if you start flying approaches on your first or second lesson, find another school/instructor.
Not sure about their instruction style, but I've heard good things about school B. Also, question, why is it a red flag if I fly approaches lesson 1/2? I believe you, I'm just generally curious as to why that's a red flag. I flew a couple of ILS approaches with my PPL instructor near the end of my training just for the heck of it.
I would go with school A ,thinking the price is rather expensive.
@Dane R, that's for just an instrument rating? Ridiculously high if it is.
@SbestCFII can do it in 7 days for around $5k.
School A for me, but I'd certainly want to see a breakdown. That's nearly an ab initio to IR price.
As long as school A's instructors actually know how to instruct in a simulator, they're the clear winner here, and the sim will either save you money or significantly add proficiency if used well. Those prices are double what they should be, at both schools. Is school A really "brand new" or did they take over from a defunct outfit?
I've never seen one's car mileage considered for choosing a school before. You have a bright future as a mooney owner, OP.
@everyone
So just to better understand my situation, I'm a full time college student. I go to school 9 months out of the year (different city than home), and live at home 3 months out of the year. In my college town, there's generally a lack of rental/flight school opportunities. Therefore I believe that they feel that they can charge whatever they want. I'm almost willing to pay it, though, because I'm in a tough situation. I don't want to go to school, put my flight training on hold, and only fly 3 months out of the year when I'm home. (Received my PPL at home before going to college, rented the Cherokee here and there for XC to remain current while at school but then it went down for upgrades for 3 months, long story. Didn't fly for like 6 months, don't want that to happen again.)
Yes, I know the prices are insane because I compared them to schools at home, and they're easily $6K+ less.
School A gave me this breakdown:
50 Hours of flight - Tecnam P2010
80 Hours of Ground
25 Hours of Pre/Post
Said to plan on $20,000, so I don't run out of money during training, then whatever i dont use, I can use for Commercial training.
Not sure that simulator time is accounted for in that quote at all.
Mentioned that the Tecnam is $239/hr which blew my mind at how expensive that is, but I believe that number may include instructor fees as well. Still figuring that out.
I'm waiting on a price breakdown from School B, but I'm surprised that they quoted $16,000 because the Cherokee rents for $150/hr wet which is pretty reasonable in my opinion.
Honestly, no matter what school I go to, I was planning on completing my instrument written before starting so I can cut down on some ground costs. Also plan to work hard during training to try to get my rating in close to minimum time.
I've also contemplated renting the Cherokee at School B (for $150/hr wet) during my fall semester just for time building purposes. Then maybe attend some sort of 7 day IFR rating course during my Christmas break, seen some for like $9000 that includes lodging.