Nah....had lunch last week with a DPE...He even said I'd be a great CFI. Of course I need to get thru the instrment, the commercial then the CFI.....You're doomed on the oral!
Nah....had lunch last week with a DPE...He even said I'd be a great CFI. Of course I need to get thru the instrment, the commercial then the CFI.....You're doomed on the oral!
It depends on which of the two testing companies you use...I took mine at Cats, which doesn't have it. Laser does (or so I've heard).Hey, does the computer still have electronic E6B/calculator that you can use?
Yep.It depends on which of the two testing companies you use...I took mine at Cats, which doesn't have it. Laser does (or so I've heard).
I know I'm not going to get 100, because I've been skipping the ones where you have to look at a flight plan and a map and calculate stuff. They're only worth a point. In the practice tests so far, at least, I can skip all of the "hard" questions and still pass.
There are what... 60? Questions. Which means I only need to get 42 correct.
103 questions actually. need 70 to pass
Incorrect. 60 questions, 42 needed to pass (70% pass rate).
I don't remember for sure if its 60 or 100 for IFR, but it is definitely 100 for commercial. + 3 extra questions for both IFR and Commercial that are not graded.
EDIT: yep.. stand corrected. 63 for the IFR with 42 to pass
I'm not sure anyone at the FAA involved with developing the knowledge exams fly anything other than as a pac in the back of a commercial airline. But what do I know?Bear in mind that nobody at the FAA (to my knowledge) routinely flies single pilot single engine non-FIKI IFR, in IMC to low approaches etc. This reflects on their institutional mindset and the types of questions (and general emphasis) you see on the knowledge tests.
But that's government, and in a way it's actually good that we get those dumb or impossible-to-answer questions, because ironically that's what real life in the soup is like. You are often in situations where things don't add up, where the book doesn't provide a solution, and you need to improvise. "Perfection" is not what you need in hard IMC, ice and turbulence, what it takes to survive is "adaptation" and "healthy instincts", the same attributes that you need to answer those confounding mis-worded questions. So maybe not so bad after all?
Hey, I was trying to be kind.I'm not sure anyone at the FAA involved with developing the knowledge exams fly anything other than as a pac in the back of a commercial airline. But what do I know?
60 questions, 0 non-graded questions, 42 to pass. This was 2 hours ago
As my "examiner" started the test, he said, "Lets see if you get any of the extra questions." He had me hit start, saw there were 60 questions, then said, "Nope." Later he explained that some tests get experimental questions, some don't...so maybe that's what you mean by 3 extra...Now that's odd. Perhaps they stopped the experimental questions for IFR. I'm quite certain that I answered 3 extra "test" questions back in 2014.
As my "examiner" started the test, he said, "Lets see if you get any of the extra questions." He had me hit start, saw there were 60 questions, then said, "Nope." Later he explained that some tests get experimental questions, some don't...so maybe that's what you mean by 3 extra...
one unusual attitude where I think the FAA answer is incorrect (climbing right turn). A) was something like "pull and complete a loop" so not relevant, B) was lower nose, add power, wings level and C) was add power, lower nose, wings level.
I chose B), but apparently C) was correct (I don't agree with that).
it makes a difference when it takes your engines 9 seconds to spool, though... in fairness its all kind of one simultaneous thing in reality but still in the proper order
In reality you do both at the same time,
On jets with low hanging engines... ...(and assuming you don't lower the nose fast enough)
uhh,,, pretty sure I said that...."in fairness its all kind of one simultaneous thing"
and now you're adding a variables that weren't there previously....
at this point I'm not sure if you are just making conversation or have some kind of over obsessive need to always be right. it seems to be the latter so with that I'll find better things to do.
...one unusual attitude where I think the FAA answer is incorrect (climbing right turn). A) was something like "pull and complete a loop" so not relevant, B) was lower nose, add power, wings level and C) was add power, lower nose, wings level.
I chose B), but apparently C) was correct (I don't agree with that).
You may disagree, but the FAA explicitly states the answer in the IFH:My argument was, that there's no way to tell which of those two answers would be "correct", so it was a 50/50.
Nose-High Attitudes
If the airspeed is decreasing, or below the desired airspeed, increase power (as necessary in proportion to the observed deceleration), apply forward elevator pressure to lower the nose and prevent a stall, and correct the bank by applying coordinated aileron and rudder pressure to level the miniature aircraft and center the ball of the turn coordinator. The corrective control applications are made almost simultaneously, but in the sequence given above.
You may disagree, but the FAA explicitly states the answer in the IFH:
Given the number of pilots I see who either fail to recognize an instrument malfunction or can't control the airplane while they troubleshoot the instrument malfunction, I think the "Primary/Supporting" questions could actually use more emphasis, but I agree with you in principal...the airplane questions should evaluate your operational knowlege, not your ability to memorize trivia.(actually my CFII and another one I asked disagree with FAA as well).
I'm not doubting the correct answer is in the IFH. I was disagreeing with the whole question. That kind of a question only tests how much of the IFH you have memorized. That is a skill that should be tested in the practical test. Same as the questions about "primary" and "supporting" instruments which are kind of pointless.
Instead of those questions, there should be more questions about how to fly arrival procedures, weather decoding, minimums and other subjects that are directly relevant to actual operations under IFR. In my test, maybe 30% of the questions were ops related questions, and I feel that is too low %age.
I'm not doubting the correct answer is in the IFH. I was disagreeing with the whole question. That kind of a question only tests how much of the IFH you have memorized....
That crap. Whoever did the nav questions for the commercial is completely in love with those and other trigonometry style math tricks. But the techniques aren't that hard to master long enough to pass the test and literally then forget them. I can't imagine ever bothering to teach a student trig tricks in the modern nav world. They're great as cocktail party fodder if you like such things.
The tests are a just a hoop to jump through - no particular value, or perhaps marginal value, compared to your flight instruction, check ride, and oral. My intuition is, if the tests disappeared, it would have zero impact on getting the rating, or on flying safety. The practice tests in the self-study books and courses cover the necessary stuff in detail. . .you do O.K. with the Gleim, or "get it" with the King courses, you're prepared with the knowledge you need. The tests are a square to fill for the Feds.
I think they do one other thing for older pilots... how many decades has it been for some since they cracked a book and were in "study mode"?
I'm a perfectionist, so like most things in my life, I over prepared, and going into the test really I felt I knew the material down pat.
As I said previously, I use text to speech for most of my posting. I guess my perfectionism doesn't carry over to my proof reading.Apparently the perfectionist aspect doesn't carry over to your use of the correct word in your thread title. Not sure if you meant that the test is now in the past or just that you passed the test?
Unless you teach Gym...Fortunately, as college faculty I'm exempt from thr FOI. Maybe because I really know how to,teach?
...the hardest part I had with the test was just simply trying to interpret the horribly worded questions. I do not feel the FAA is trying to test your IFR knowledge, but instead just trying to trick you with stupid situations or poor wording.