have any of you guys bought an airplane, got checked out in it, and first solo out said woah?!?! what am I doing? I did, flew a 2.7 hr cross country, with one stop, and called the CFI. we have a flight scheduled for Wednesday.
I had a Grumman Tiger for years, loved it, sold it due to needing more capacity, and bought an A36 Bonanza. Insurance required 10 hours dual, 20 hours limited to 3 passengers before being unrestricted.
First few flights I was a little uncomfortable with so many things being different -- especially with how easy it was to get the plane deep in the yellow arc in comparison to the Tiger. Also, the heavier plane was a huge change from the Tiger on the controls. About the only thing easier was landing it. Anyway, I'd find myself being way too ginger with it (in the opinion from a pilot I deeply respect with a few thousand Bonanza hours).
Anyway, the idea popped in my head to just go get my Commercial rating -- with all the max-performance maneuvers to force myself to not baby the plane and really learn it -- and to use up some of those 10 hours of CFI time. In retrospect, I think it was as right as right could be for me to really dive in an truly learn a relatively more substantial plane than what I was used to. 'Knocked the written out the way with a few days using that Dauntless software, then called up the CFI. After 2 weeks of 180 precision approaches, chandelles, lazy 8s, short/soft fields -- to commercial standards -- my CFI and I felt like it was time to call the DPE. Set a date, continued to practice like crazy, and showed up feeling like I really knew and was comfortable with the "new to me" plane. kind of forced me to not be timid but also not be unsafe.
Someone mentioned flying it at greatly different weights. Totally agree. My CFI and I recruited a group that took us to max gross on a hot day to see that. Then we'd have people sit way back the 5th and 6th seats only to throw the C/G aft, then we'd do it C/G forward. Landings with full flaps, no flaps, high speed, low speed to "feel" what the plane wanted. Ditto for stalls -- flap down stalls, flap up, power on, power off -- dozens and dozens really feeling the plane talk back and getting a sense of how it would let you know something was off...
That was in September and I've now logged 120 hours in the plane -- and feel like I know the A36 at least as good I had gotten to know the Tiger. Fits like a glove / no dark areas of mystery...
Just my 2 cents on how to get up to speed in a substantially different plane...