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Ladies and Gentlemen,
I was inquiring about traing for a rotorcraft license. Initially for a private license and eventually going commercial. I'm a former flight paramedic and wanted to get into the pilot seat, however the pilots I work with have all received their training in the military so for a civilian like me they arent much help other than a great resource.. I was wondering about anyones thoughts or ideas on receiving training. Do the Mom n Pop shops provide adequate training and experience? or would I receive more/better from a larger company? I know mostly it depends on me. Would it be better or helop any to obtain my private pilot license 1st then "convert" to the rotary? Has anyone had experience with this process? Any and all thoughts and/or ideas would be greatly appreciated..! Thanks in advance.. Chris Soon to be student.. |
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#4
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![]() wrote in message ... Once you have a fixed wing PPL, the FAA min to get a rotorcraft rating is only 16 hours. The catch is that most of schools I have looked at will only credit you 10 hours toward your 40 total required for rotorcraft. That leave a minimum of 30 that they want you to have in a real helicopter. If someone can pass their test after 16 hours or even 30, they'd be one in a million though. In which case this isn't really that much of a catch... -- Inweb Networks. Quality internet and telecoms services Sales: 08000 612222 Support: 08704322222. http://www.inweb.co.uk E1 call share - 65%. 0800, 0845 and 0870 numbers - best rates. Resellers welcome |
#5
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"Andrew Crane" wrote:
If someone can pass their test after 16 hours or even 30, they'd be one in a million though. In which case this isn't really that much of a catch... Thats the legal requirement - not the practical requirement. I am, myself, currently using fixed wing instruction to learn about navigation, airport operations, communication, traffic patterns and other things common to both. However, it is a total, absolute myth that there is any similarity between controlling the two aircraft beyond the fact that they both fly. I had been told that flying a stick plane was similar to a helicopter in straight & level flight, but after doing this, I learned it is not true. However, I have been hearing more and more people claim that they have been using simulators to greatly reduce the number of real helicopter hours. I was able to hover in 1.5 hours. I thought that was good until another guy was able to do it on his introductory flight after 15 minutes thanks to a lot of practice on sims. I have yet to see a really decent helicopter sim, but most of the better ones are good enough to help you out a lot even if they aren't perfect. Obviously, even when they don't count towards your hours (some do), they are far cheaper than a real helicopter and a lot safer. If a sim can cause you to master an operation in a real helicopter faster, then it is saving you the money you would have spent in the real helicopter doing the same thing. In short, I believe it is possible to get the HPPL in 30 real hours with the aid of simulators and a background in fixed wing. Dennis H. Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm |
#6
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"Andrew Crane" wrote in message ...
wrote in message ... Once you have a fixed wing PPL, the FAA min to get a rotorcraft rating is only 16 hours. The catch is that most of schools I have looked at will only credit you 10 hours toward your 40 total required for rotorcraft. That leave a minimum of 30 that they want you to have in a real helicopter. If someone can pass their test after 16 hours or even 30, they'd be one in a million though. In which case this isn't really that much of a catch... Well, I had my CPL,Multi,CFI and transitioned to Comm. Rotor-Helo,CFI-Helo in less than 50 hours. Of course maybe my total time and experience may have had something to do with it. I allocated two weeks for this project. Skyking |
#7
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![]() Skyking wrote: Well, I had my CPL,Multi,CFI and transitioned to Comm. Rotor-Helo,CFI-Helo in less than 50 hours. Of course maybe my total time and experience may have had something to do with it. I allocated two weeks for this project. Skyking Having no prior flight experience they cut me loose at about 16 hours in a million dollar helicopter. I have little doubt that I could have passed an FAA exam at that point as well. None of it means diddley. When I soloed that helicopter I had three things going for me; fear, pride, and little knowledge of my limitations. In hindsight I can't believe that at the skill level I had then that I had the balls to let them make me solo. A couple years and a few hundred hours later I went back and took a week long "Advanced Airmanship" class where they teach real-world emergency procs. and decision making (eg. 0 A/S 300ft autos). The IP and I didn't hit it off at a personal level, which was good because he really went out of his way to demonstrate how little I really knew. The guy really knew his stuff though, and I learned a whole lot more and gained a new appreciation for how much I still didn't know. At one point during this experience I seriously botched a recovery and we found ourselves engine-out at 15-20 ft flying sideways at about 50 knots. I thought for sure we were gonna ball it up. Nope, he turned it into a perfectly executed no-run landing. The real lesson was that as long as the machine was operating within my limitations it was all-good and I looked and flew like an expert helicopter pilot, but if events compounded that took me outside my range of experience then it could get really exciting really fast. The reason I came down so hard on the guy who said you could do it in 16 hours was related to something I'm going through right now; A friend of mine who has way-way more money than brains is a collector of type ratings and old warbirds. He's somehow managed to get people to sign him off on some seriously powerful hardware which he then goes out and buys. He's also pretty arrogant and cocksure esp. when everyone who's flown with him says that he's a terrible pilot and his attitude is gonna kill him. ( I've personally seen him take off 3 times with the speed brakes on in his most recent 1800 HP acquisition. ) The only rating this guy doesn't have now is "Rotorcraft." So the other day he walks up and tells me (brags actually) that he's gonna go out and buy a MD500 and get his Rotorcraft ticket. He also says he should be able to do it in less than a week. Sure enough, a couple days later I see him flying backwards 200agl with a MD500 operator/CFI who I'm guessing needed the money badly. Now I'm absolutely sure that my friend is gonna go out and do exactly what he said. The trouble is that the skills required to pass the FAA exam are so marginal that I'm sure he'll pass in the minimum time. I'm also equally sure that he'll make some kind of mistake equivalent to taking off with speed brakes. Hopefully it happens early and the gods are smiling on him enough to just scare the living crap outa him. Bart |
#8
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Transition to rotorcraft is not like a new type rating. I really wish
people would stop promulgating this myth. It is NOT faster or cheaper to get your ASEL stuff first. You can not be a safe helicopter pilot with only 16 hours in one. Also, transitoning from fixed wing to rotorcraft requires you to un-learn some nasty "instinctual" behaviors that might get you killed if you apply them. If you need to be convinced of this just take a quick lesson where you land the helicopter on a dolly on the leeward side of some buildings on a gusty day. That'll shrink your sphincter and ego enough to ensure you'll want a few more lessons before taking a checkride. Part 61 does not govern the laws of physics or physiology. Bart Skyking wrote: Due to costs, it would be wise to get your Airplane, Commercial-Instrument or at leat Commercial before working on the Rotorcraft Rating. You can read FAR Part 61 for the hourly requirements. Oh, BTW, "Catch 22", once you obtain that coveted rating all of the ptoential employers will want you to have logged thousands of hours that you won't have. Good luck, Skyking |
#9
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I'll put in my 2 cents worth as well since I'm in the midst of the same kind of
journey as you. I'm age 40 (too old for military) and got the bug at work (TV Station) when we got a helicopter and I flew as a passenger/photographer. My brother in law is a professional pilot (Citations) and strongly advised me (wisely so) that if what I wanted was to fly helicopters, to train to fly them and not try to transition. There are too many things to unlearn. There is even a robinson safety notice about accidents caused by fixed wingers doing the wrong thing. I'm about 30hrs into this and so far its going well, I've gotten the written out of the way pretty easily, and I don't regret the decision to go with rotorcraft training. By the way, I'm at a small place with only a handfull of helicopters and the one on one attention from an instructor with thousands of hours and an A&P IA license is worth every penny. Dave davdirect |
#10
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Bart is so right that the only way he could be so right is to have the
Tshirt, Shorts, Sox , anc Jock Strap for having Been There and Done That. I soloed my Safari and was flying about OK as long as nothing went wrong. One day it did and I reacted like a well trained fixed wing pilot and nearly got killed. There certainly are some serious fixed wing trainings that need to be erased the moment you start up with the collective. If I had done what I know now to be the proper response, I wouldn't have rolled my Safari up in a very little ball and dinged my body up. I've done the add-on training and still feel like I got a license to learn and have to be very careful. I taught myself to fly a Benson Gyrocopter in the 60's when dual was not available. I never dinged a thing. The helicopter is another story. I can't imagine even after having several beers teaching myself to fly a helo. I'm sure that I don't have enough dual to achieve the safety level I would like to have yet. I have more than 200hrs. now. The only 16hr helo pilots that I would ride with are Chuck Yeager and Bob Hoover and I would have a dialogue with them first. Stu Fields. "Bart" wrote in message ... Transition to rotorcraft is not like a new type rating. I really wish people would stop promulgating this myth. It is NOT faster or cheaper to get your ASEL stuff first. You can not be a safe helicopter pilot with only 16 hours in one. Also, transitoning from fixed wing to rotorcraft requires you to un-learn some nasty "instinctual" behaviors that might get you killed if you apply them. If you need to be convinced of this just take a quick lesson where you land the helicopter on a dolly on the leeward side of some buildings on a gusty day. That'll shrink your sphincter and ego enough to ensure you'll want a few more lessons before taking a checkride. Part 61 does not govern the laws of physics or physiology. Bart Skyking wrote: Due to costs, it would be wise to get your Airplane, Commercial-Instrument or at leat Commercial before working on the Rotorcraft Rating. You can read FAR Part 61 for the hourly requirements. Oh, BTW, "Catch 22", once you obtain that coveted rating all of the ptoential employers will want you to have logged thousands of hours that you won't have. Good luck, Skyking |
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