korben88
Line Up and Wait
Just curious, if you wanted to rent a 172 what do you have to do for the checkout and how much does it usually run?
It depends on the requirements of whomever you're renting from but I've usually done a mini-check ride. Steep turns, stalls, a few landings, etc. They want to ensure you're competent to fly their aircraft without damaging it.
The checkouts I've done have always been short and sweet. Slow flight, stalls, steep turns and a few laps around the pattern. At an uncontrolled field it can be done in less than an hour if you're already familiar with the systems and v-speeds.
Depends upon the type of plane, your experience (overall and with that type of plane) and the requirements of their insurance.
For a 172 the answers above are spot on.
People blame insurance all the time, but frankly in years of dealing with leasebacks, it was never the insurance company that set the checkout requirements, it was the school/fbo/club.
I treat the checkout like a mock checkride. We do maneuvers, landings, and some ground
Prices will vary at every FBO you go to.
As others have said, it's usually a rundown of the local procedures, airspace and then the flight is basically like a BFR.
People blame insurance all the time, but frankly in years of dealing with leasebacks, it was never the insurance company that set the checkout requirements, it was the school/fbo/club.
People blame insurance all the time, but frankly in years of dealing with leasebacks, it was never the insurance company that set the checkout requirements, it was the school/fbo/club.
When I was instructing, the owner of the 172 we had wanted at least a 5 hour checkout if the renter had not flown a 172 in the last year. If the renter showed competency I would shorten it to 2 hours. They told me to tell renters that it was an insurance requirement, but in reality it was just AP for the owners. (AP-additional profit)
Plus the cost of the CFIIs the cost typically the same as the rental? Say if a rental price is $110/hr wet and your checkout ride is 1 hour, you pay $110 for the checkout?
I also know of a flying club that was mostly controlled by a few CFIs. They also blamed the number of hours for the more complex aircraft on insurance but I later found out that was not the case. What was the case is that the CFIs wanted the additional money and hours that those rules provided them. Selfish a-holes.
depends. I had to be checked out in a C162 in Mesa, AZ (KFFZ) last spring before being able to rent it solo. they examined my logbook and pilot cert and then the CFI and I sat down for about 15-min and chatted about the airplane, the airspace we would be flying through and a bit of Q & A to test my knowledge . the flight itself entailed 1 t/o and landing, a couple of steep turns and slow flight. since this was also a new geographic area for me the FBO wanted to make me aware of this and that in the area. the checkout portion of the flight ran maybe 30-minutes. the balance of the time was some sightseeing. in general the rental agency wants to be sure you are competent to fly the plane.Just curious, if you wanted to rent a 172 what do you have to do for the checkout and how much does it usually run?
Open Airplane is making an attempt to reduce the cost of renting from multiple FBOs. If I didn't have my own airplane I think I'd be active there.
http://pilots.openairplane.com/
...and if you are spending the money...you can do your BFR in conjunction with a checkout. If you are spending the money with a CFI flying maneuvers, might as well put that towards resetting your BFR clock.
A lot depends on you. How many hours do you have? He or she will certainly want to see your log book. Are you comfortable flying it, stalling it, landing say in 2500 feet or do you need a six thousand foot runway for a 172?Thanks for responses guys. I'm still a ways off from worrying about such things but just wanted to know for when the time comes.
I've looked into that openairplane thing because there's a school not far from here that participates and it seems like most locations charge more for rentals than you can get in the same area or even same airport.
I find a checkout in a basic aircraft I've never flown before is an hour or so, provided I've done my homework, read the POH and made my checklist. More for HP or especially complex.
A remote checkout in a 172 might be an hour, but more commonly, it seems to be less than that. Best I got was 30 minutes Hobbs at Vancouver, WA. I had 100 hours in type at the time, and the just instructor wanted to make sure I wasn't an idiot. Flew over the river, did a couple of turns, one power off stall, then came back and landed. I suppose if I'd bounced the landing or screwed up stall recovery, he might have wanted to see some more. He looked in my logbook for high altitude experience, since I said I wanted to go flying around the Cascades. That was it.
OpenAirplane is trying something important, but in practice, the prices seem REALLY high.
Are we supposed to track flight level in our log books? I cant recall ever having to do that so trying to figure out if that is something that you really track and how? Maybe just an endorsement?
Another item in the laundry list of why GA is in decline.I once met a CFI who wanted to do a 5 hour 172 checkout with a 2 hour XC as part of a checkout. I told him thanks but I'll rent from someone else.