Not to ridicule, but this is, well, ridiculous.
The number of people, who get their ticket with minimal hours is statistically insignificant. The reality is that most students take more than 50% more than the minimum time.
The course of study that I recommend to everyone (especially older guys just getting into it, and kids who don't have a rich daddy) is start with your Sport rating. But don't fly Sport requirements. Fly the PPL requirements, cross country, etc, etc. Anything that takes more miles or more time the Sport cert requires, do it. It counts if you go on to PPL.
Take your Sport checkride. Get your Sport Cert. You now have proof of return on investment.
Now take the Mrs, the Mr, the girlfriend, the boyfriend, the kids, whatever, whoever, flying. Have fun.
Rack up hours. Hone your mad skills.
Now look at what's left: A Medical, Night work, Hood time, and a checkride. If you can pass a medical, go for it. If not, fly the heck out of your Sport cert.
BTW it's about 20%++ cheaper to go the Sport to PPL because Light Sport rentals are significantly cheaper.
And one other little bit of opinionizing, while I have the floor:
All the "my pecker is bigger than your pecker" posturing that goes on in the aviation world does more to turn people off, and away, from flying than just about anything else, even money.
If someone is really motivated to learn to fly, they will crawl through broken glass to find a way to pay for it. As soon as some jerk ridicules them, then the dream dies, and so does the motivation.
Glenn
Thanks!!!!
I am 41. I wanted to learn to fly since I was 8! Been to oshkosh 8 times in the last 10 years... But have always thought to be too expensive to get my private license, but never gave up on the dream...
So, been trying to figure out how to do it at a lower cost, and the initial solution I found was that if you going to do it, it needs be done ALL in a very short time, or it will take you really long ($$$$) if you fly only 1 hour a week, or two hours a month. So, the affordable solution was to take 30 to 40 days off from work, and go somewhere just to get your ppl. I can't take 30 days off.... But if I could, I would be able to get my ppl close to the minimums. The other option, 2 hours a month, probably means it will take me 70 hours, or three years - I might quit at that pace for lack of motivation, how many ppl students haven't quit???
Now, here is a twist. In August 2012, after taking my then 15 year old daughter who at the time was living in Brasil for a scenery flight over Chicago, she decide that she wanted to fly once she came up to live with daddy in 2013...
Since I am not that rich, now there are two wanna be pilots!! How are we going to afford this?
AND then the better question, how often are we going to fly after we get a ppl on a cessna burning 10gph???
So suddenly it struck me... Get a sports pilot license, it will be faster, less costly, you both will reap the reward of having finished something (I hear toooo many people who started their ppl and has not finished because of how long is taking them, if they had done the sports pilot, they would at least by now, both in time and investment, have something to show for!)
Now, I DO want to one day get my IFR! And so does my daughter. So from the start we know we want to be headed towards and IFR. But we both will not be flying for a living, as of yet. So no need for a hurry on the IFR...
So, I've been researching on how to do it. What would be the MOST EFFICIENT path? DOABLE PATH (remember all who have started and not finished their ppl!!!) And at the LEAST costly way.
So, Glenn, I think you have just helped me with the last part that I needed to close on my plan:
1. Get a SP with a CFI (so hour can count towards ppl in future)
---->>> I WILL BE HAPPIER (flying) SOONER!!!
2. Buy an used CTLS. (so I can afford to fly!!! AND FLY OFTEN!!!!!! 5gph vs 10gph, $$ TBO rotax vs IO, etc, etc)
3. Fly LSA ("Fly the PPL requirements, cross country, etc, etc." )
---->>> I WILL HAVE FUN while racking those hours.... and at 5gph I should be able to afford cross country....
4. Once I cover the ppl hours requirements, then do the extra stuff needed for a ppl
("Rack up hours. Hone your mad skills.Now look at what's left: A Medical, Night work, Hood time, and a checkride. If you can pass a medical, go for it. If not, fly the heck out of your Sport cert")
5. Once I have the ppl, I can do IFR training (LSA can do IFR training on VFR days) (CTLS with glass Dynon100 and 120, etc) on my own low hourly cost plane....
IN CONCLUSION:
Getting a sports pilot will afford me and my daughter a pathway to an IFR rating while we have FUN flying!!! Our goal to be Sports Pilot by Oshkosh 2014!!
And at a low hourly cost to operate aircraft like the CTLS,
WE WILL FLY OFTEN!
which is the whole point of getting a license!!!
(lastly, for those of you that don't get it, and will tell me to get my ppl right off the bat, remember all those students who have quit their ppl, when they could be doing sports flying by now and slowly building their hours towards ppl)
(and please, don't argue that an ppl can also buy a CTLS... Sure true. But if you get your ppl on a cessna, and having just got your ppl, you really going to venture into an LSA aircraft???? Or every time this new ppl is thinking about flying he will be thinking on the cessna... or how he could buy his own cessna...)
(and sure, you can get a ppl on a LSA. But how many schools have ppl on a LSA?)
Andre
if you are in around Chicago,
come at my place for the beast real authentic Brazilian food you can find:
www.tasteofbrasilcafe.com