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I have been working on my instrument rating for the
past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? David PP-ASEL-Instrument Student (KORL) |
#2
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In article ,
"CFLav8r" wrote: I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? David PP-ASEL-Instrument Student (KORL) Absolutely. The instrument rating is *much* harder than the private pilot training. I remember feeling physically exhausted at the end of a flight early on in the training. Then, somewhere around 3/4 of the way through the 40 hours, it clicked. I suddenly found myself able to fly the plane, navigate, brief an approach, and still have brainpower left over to chat with my instructor. Don't worry, it'll happen for you too. |
#3
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![]() "CFLav8r" wrote in message .. . I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Since you are able to post, you are not yet in information overload. Let us know when you have pigeons nesting on your head, and you can't remember when they moved in. |
#4
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That may mean you are ready to take the test, or might as well take the
test. That's how it was with me. "CFLav8r" wrote in message .. . I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? David PP-ASEL-Instrument Student (KORL) |
#5
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I'm going to suggest that your problem is one of relevancy.
You're learning a bunch of stuff that your brain is saying "why do I need to know this.." rather than "boy, I'm glad I know this; it's going to save my bacon some day." Perhaps if you could get some passenger time in actual conditions, it would help you see how an instrument pilot USES what you are learning as an actual instrument pilot. Of course, not everything is used on every flight... and frankly, some of the stuff the FAA wants might NEVER be used... but you get the idea. Rich CFLav8r wrote: I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? David PP-ASEL-Instrument Student (KORL) |
#6
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CFLav8r wrote:
I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? No, but I got my instrument several years after completing my EE degree, and few things have compared with that from an intellectual challenge perspective. What I found helpful was to put key bits of information such as lost comm procedures, visibility requirements, light gun signals, etc. on 3x5 index cards. I'd then carry 10-15 of these in my shirt pocket and whenever I found myself waiting in line, stuck in traffic, or simply cooling my heels somewhere, I could pull those out and run through them a few times. Amazing how much will stick after a few weeks of doing this. I used the same technique to complete the EE. :-) Matt |
#7
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David,
You'll do it. The hardest part will come after you get the rating -- Trying to fly on instruments often enough in order to maintain your proficiency, unless you adhere to conservative personal minimums. You'll see what I mean (smile). Steve "CFLav8r" wrote in message .. . I have been working on my instrument rating for the past three months and although I have gained considerable new knowledge, it feels like my brain is in information overload. Now every time I study something new, everything already learned seems to purge itself. Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? David PP-ASEL-Instrument Student (KORL) |
#8
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Steve wrote:
: David, : You'll do it. The hardest part will come after you get the rating -- Trying : to fly on instruments often enough in order to maintain your proficiency, : unless you adhere to conservative personal minimums. You'll see what I mean : (smile). That's what I thought too.... "I fly plenty. 6-months is a long time to just do 6 approaches." Boy... skills fade fast. Now before any trip that I want to be confident doing some enroute IFR, I go up with a safety pilot and get some quality hood time before each one. I feel like if I haven't done any practice within a week or two, I shouldn't be accepting the clearance. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#9
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![]() "CFLav8r" wrote in message .. . Has anyone else felt this way while working on the instrument rating? No, I found it much more frustrating than that. You just have to keep banging your head against the wall, until one day it finally cracks. The instrument rating is a war of attrition. Keep the frequency of lessons up (2x weekly or more is preferable) and just keep buggering on and one day you'll make it. -cwk. |
#10
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"CFLav8r" wrote in news:CBDed.17518$1f.3578
@tornado.tampabay.rr.com: Of course it's possible. I did it, and my name isn't Einstein. Some people learn better through reading, some through seeing, some through hearing, and some through doing. You have to find what works best for you, and use that more, but you still need to be able to learn some from all of them. Sometimes things just aren't visible, but suddenly they fall into place. Keep at it, and you'll get it. -- Regards, Stan |
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