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#1
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I am a 300+ hour private pilot living and flying in the NYC area
(specifically Caldwell NJ / Teterboro). I am interested in taking an accelerated instrument course and have been attracted to the PIC 10 day course and other similar 10 day courses. I already have about 10 hours of simulator time and am familiar basics of partial panel instrument and approach training. However I now want to complete my training in a focused and intense training environment. Can anyone recommend an excellent course in this area or others areas around the country? I am particularly cost sensitive and would be most interested in a complete course (aircraft time included) for less than $7000. Thanks! |
#2
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Hi xxx (you didn't give a name)
Slight sarcasm intended, but this brings to mind a sign which I've often seen in Automotive and TV/Radio repair shops... Quick Cheap Good --------- Pick two --------- A good job quick won't be cheap A good job cheap won't be quick A quick job cheap won't be good And you are in one of the highest cost areas in the nation... Having said that... I am a ~100 hr pilot currently working on my IA at American Flyers in Cleveland. I will be looking at ~$9500 when finished, but it IS QUICK and it IS GOOD. I am using Part 141 'cuz GI Bill reimburses me 60%...and 141 tng tends to be expensive. However, AF also do accelerated part 61 tng...and if you already have your 50 hrs X-C...so much the better...and it will cost you a lot less! Don't balk at the rates until you do the math! These guys will work with you all day 7 days a week if you want. To start, I took a week off work and did M-F, about 7 hours a day to kick it off. That got me well over 1/3 of the way there. Should have my IA rating by mid-March and going right into the Commercial. Why? Why not? BTW, Did you count the usual $300-500 in test prep material in your $7000??? AF has their own...see if you can preview it first tho...I think Sportys would be better... Not sure how far this is, but might be worth checking out... American Flyers 50 Airport Road, Suite 120 Morristown, NJ 07960 800-449-7650 Can't hurt to take a lesson or two, it's all log-able! FYI, no affiliation, just a satisfied customer... --Don Don Byrer Electronics Technician FAA Airways Facilites/Tech Ops, RADAR/Data/Comm @ CLE Amateur Radio KJ5KB Private Pilot Instrument Student PP-ASEL 30 Jan 2005 |
#3
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![]() BTW, Did you count the usual $300-500 in test prep material in your $7000??? AF has their own...see if you can preview it first tho...I think Sportys would be better... No reason to spend anywhere near that kind of money. The Sporty's and King DvD courses are routinely available on eBay for 60-90% of their new price. Buy one, use it and resell it. I actually made money on my Sporty's discs! Same story on books, supplemental video tapes, ets. Everything is available and what you don't like can be resold. Best value is to find a large package, keep what you like and resell the rest. |
#4
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As long as you don't mind using old versions. The instrument practical test
standards changed a few months back. "Mitty" wrote in message ... BTW, Did you count the usual $300-500 in test prep material in your $7000??? AF has their own...see if you can preview it first tho...I think Sportys would be better... No reason to spend anywhere near that kind of money. The Sporty's and King DvD courses are routinely available on eBay for 60-90% of their new price... |
#5
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![]() On 3/1/05 6:35 PM, Michael R wrote the following: As long as you don't mind using old versions. The instrument practical test standards changed a few months back. Small changes and only to the PTS AFAIK. I'll bet there haven't been significant changes to the Sporty's and King courses in several years, maybe longer. Producing that stuff is just too expensive to be re-doing it everytime there is a NOTAM. For the drilling the actual test, faatest.com stays very current and I have found it to be a good cheap tool. Got 100% on my written. "Mitty" wrote in message ... BTW, Did you count the usual $300-500 in test prep material in your $7000??? AF has their own...see if you can preview it first tho...I think Sportys would be better... No reason to spend anywhere near that kind of money. The Sporty's and King DvD courses are routinely available on eBay for 60-90% of their new price... |
#6
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I am a 300+ hour private pilot living and flying in the NYC area (specifically Caldwell NJ / Teterboro). I am interested in taking an accelerated instrument course and have been attracted to the PIC 10 day course and other similar 10 day courses. I already have about 10 hours of simulator time and am familiar basics of partial panel instrument and approach training. However I now want to complete my training in a focused and intense training environment. I suspect there is no such thing as an unbiased opinion on this subject. We all learned a certain way, and those who are happy with the way we learned will argue that it is the best. Like you (I'm guessing) I was a busy professional motivated to get my IR done and finished. The PIC concept appealed to me, but I ultimately chose to work with a local instructor and took about 18 months and 55 hours to do it, with probably half of that time being the usual friction of life. In my mind, a big part of the question has to be whether you can link up with a true CFII in your area. By this I don't mean a 500-hour graduate of some ab-initio program, but someone with some serious time. A key question to ask is whether they will take you up for training in actual conditions, and what their comfort margins are. With 25 hours in, I was going up with my CFII on days with 300-400' ceilings and 1mi vis. That's a good workout. You may well not find anyone who fits this bill. It's not unlikely that the guy you do find does not work for the local flight school as he has a list of steady clients who keep him busy and pay $40/hr right into his pocket. If you can't find such a fellow, then go ahead, go with PIC. I do not doubt that they will teach you the procedures well, and that's what you need to pass the test. There's no shame in that and if you're a 22yo kid who wants an airline job it's probably the sensible approach. But perhaps more so than any other rating, the difference between what you need to pass the test and what you need to really use the rating well as a private pilot is gigantic. My CFII believed that it was important to work on the skills over 6-12 months so the procuedures got really imprinted into your brain and allowed you to see a variety of conditions. This is doubly true up here in the Northeast where you've really got three entirely different climates to fly in. Again, if you have a CFII who won't fly when the ceilings are below 1500', this doesn't make much difference. Also, if you really want to use the rating, at least for the first year or two you will want to do a lot of recurrent training. I try to fly approaches, holds, etc. in actual with my CFII at least once every three months. In this case it is good to have someone local who knows you (and vice-versa) you can call on when you have some free time and the clouds roll in. If you don't have the time to get the rating the old-fashioned way, do you have the time to keep yourself proficient enough to use it? Can anyone recommend an excellent course in this area or others areas around the country? I am particularly cost sensitive and would be most interested in a complete course (aircraft time included) for less than $7000. We all have a budget, but $7000 is pushing it a little, at least in the Northeast where a plane + instructor will be at least $130/hour. I'm just going to throw a few more cents in here... The IR is simply *different* than all the others, because it's a license to take yourself in harm's way. You can be a VFR private pilot, and as long as you follow some pretty basic rules, probably never come anywhere close to grief, especially if you stay proficient. IFR flying is different. People on the ground looking up at a sky of fluffy white clouds cannot appreciate just how harsh and unforgiving environment it really is up there. With the right equipment and skills it can be challenged safely most of the time. But if you really want to use the rating, you owe it to yourself to train like your life depends on it, and there is simply no cheap way to do so. -cwk. |
#7
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Colin W Kingsbury wrote:
In my mind, a big part of the question has to be whether you can link up with a true CFII in your area. By this I don't mean a 500-hour graduate of some ab-initio program, but someone with some serious time. A key question to ask is whether they will take you up for training in actual conditions, and what their comfort margins are. With 25 hours in, I was going up with my CFII on days with 300-400' ceilings and 1mi vis. That's a good workout. I know several good instructors in the CDW/TEB area. Choosing amongst them is, in my opinion, down to a matter of style. But all have plenty of experience teaching in actual and thousands of hours "in the system". While this is not an accelerated program, you might be able to do something of this sort anyway. You'd have to discuss it with the CFII of your choice, of course, but with enough lead time they could probably block out many hours for you each week for the time you'll need. If you're interested in getting in contact these these instructors, contact me privately. - Andrew |
#8
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Short, intense training can do the job. It's not what I did, but if I
had to do it over again, it is what I would do. It all really depends on the person. It is more about what you do with the rating after you get it, than the rating itself. In my case, I am a mature self learner, who owns his own airplane. But either way will work. When you appear at the intense course, they schedule your checkride. That has to tell you something. For me, flying IFR is mostly about worrying about something in the airplane failing and dealing with ATC. Flying the approaches and cruising in the clouds seems to go smoothly. Though the skills do deteriorate. I am probably marginal right now for IMC. But I know my limitations and can get back up to speed. I wouldn't fly a low approach right now. But I would fly cruise in the clouds, and after about a 1/2 hour of that, I would up to speed for an approach. The autopilot in my plane is broken right now, which doesn't mean I can't do it, but it takes away some safety margin. Other than that, my equipment is all working. I am still legal to go, currencywise. The decision to go depends on the weather, the condition of the plane, my mental state, my recent experience and how familiar I am with the route and will I know what to expect from ATC. Add all those factors up and I get a go/nogo indicator. I know enough to say no, which is important. |
#9
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Baliman,
You may want to check out the East Coast IFR experience, 6-days of intensive training for $6000 http://www.dsflight.com/eastcoast-ifr.html We are both IFR students and are thinking of taking the course soon. Hai Longworth |
#10
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On 1 Mar 2005 07:31:10 -0800, "
wrote: Baliman, You may want to check out the East Coast IFR experience, 6-days of intensive training for $6000 http://www.dsflight.com/eastcoast-ifr.html We are both IFR students and are thinking of taking the course soon. Hai Longworth Well, it may be a great experience. And it may be worth the money. But the way I read it, you are going to get about 15 hours of intrument time over 6 days. That's not what I would call "intensive". And with another 25 hours of instrument time required on top of this $6000, I wouldn't call it real cheap, either, compared to, say, a 10-day course with 20 hours of sim time at $40/hour and20 of an aircraft @100/hour, and 80 hours of an instructor's time, say $3600, and you got yourself a rating from scratch for less than $7000. But they are totally different experiences, to be sure. |
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