livitup
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2009
- Messages
- 357
- Location
- Southern Northern Virginia
- Display Name
Display name:
livitup
A long-time CFI (retired from his primary occupation, now teaching for fun) offers the following instructional plan at my local airport. He owns a new-ish 172 which is hangared at the field. It is IFR equipped, but I don't know if it has GPS in it (not important for primary flight training, but possibly useful information for evaluating the deal). His fee schedule is very simple. He charges $135 per hour for instruction, including the plane, wet. The catch is that the $135 rate runs on the ground, in the classroom, in the plane, in the air, dual or solo. If you're talking to him or flying his plane, it's $135.
For reference, that's about the same price I'd pay for a ratted out trainer 172 at the local Class-D airport, and I'd add on $50-$60/hour for the instructor. So it seems like a great deal, like you're getting the instructor for free, until you realize you're paying $135 even when you're on the ground, previewing the lesson, reviewing ground school information, preflighting the plane, or reviewing the day's flying. He handles ground school by letting you go through your choice of King/Sporty's/Gleim, and reviewing with you "as needed".
One thing I don't know is how the air vs. ground time shakes out proportion-wise for the average Part 61 student. I've been studying aviation and doing ground-school stuff on and off for 20 years, so I think I'll pick up the "book" stuff quickly and not need much review on it.
Do you think this is a good deal, or not, and why?
Thanks!
For reference, that's about the same price I'd pay for a ratted out trainer 172 at the local Class-D airport, and I'd add on $50-$60/hour for the instructor. So it seems like a great deal, like you're getting the instructor for free, until you realize you're paying $135 even when you're on the ground, previewing the lesson, reviewing ground school information, preflighting the plane, or reviewing the day's flying. He handles ground school by letting you go through your choice of King/Sporty's/Gleim, and reviewing with you "as needed".
One thing I don't know is how the air vs. ground time shakes out proportion-wise for the average Part 61 student. I've been studying aviation and doing ground-school stuff on and off for 20 years, so I think I'll pick up the "book" stuff quickly and not need much review on it.
Do you think this is a good deal, or not, and why?
Thanks!