Okay, "young CFI" may have been a poor choice of words on my part.
The kind of guys who are intent on "teaching you something" on a BFR, no matter how inane, aren't always "young". But in my experience they have fit one of these two distinctly different profiles:
The Young Ones
1. Up and coming CFI at the local flight school
2. On the fast-track to the majors.
3. Never flies "for fun".
4. Thinks they will die on any approach below 95 knots. (All they've flown in the last six months are King Airs...
![Tongue :tongue: :tongue:](/community/styles/poa/poa_smilies/tongue.gif)
)
5. Never does primary flight instruction.
*or*
The Old(er) Ones
1. Recently obtained their CFI certificate
2. Work full-time in a non-aviation field
3. They fly to support their other business
4. True "students of aviation" -- and they want to share it.
5. Never does primary flight instruction.
Again, these aren't "bad" people, or "bad" CFIs, in any sense of the word. Both types feel an intense need or desire to put you through your paces in a BFR, and will work their butts (and yours) off to ensure that it happens.
The former group does it because it feeds their ego, I suspect, while the latter group does it because they truly believe that this is what BFRs are all about, and they simply love to teach. They've worked their butts off to obtain that CFI certificate, and they are going to USE it, dammit!
The end result is the same, although I think we all enjoy the latter group more. :wink2: Enthusiasm is infectious.
Still, if you fly a couple of times per week, and your skills are sharp, at some level a BFR should be a phase check, an assessment of your basic skills, designed by law to ensure that the sky isn't full of crazy or incompetent pilots.
In my case, I was very glad to have the chance to fly with an old salt, a man with more flight time and experience than I will EVER attain (he was an Air Traffic Controller for over 40 years, too), who had the experience and self-confidence to be able to make an assessment quickly and easily.