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#1
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Hi folks,
If you want to learn to fly and have half a year or more to take off and live anywhere in the USA, where would you go to learn to fly? I ask this because I have the opportunity in 2006 to live anywhere (preferably in the US) to fulfill a dream I've had since I was 5. I am 25 years old now and am self-employed and therefore can live anywhere for the time being on a moderate income of around 50K. So, if I could focus all of my time and energy on flying lessons, where would you go? Alaska? Seattle area? I am just interested in a PPL, not commercial, but I want to learn from the best. I also prefer small town airports to big metros. So, lets hear it! |
#2
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Riverside Ca.
wrote in message ups.com... Hi folks, If you want to learn to fly and have half a year or more to take off and live anywhere in the USA, where would you go to learn to fly? I ask this because I have the opportunity in 2006 to live anywhere (preferably in the US) to fulfill a dream I've had since I was 5. I am 25 years old now and am self-employed and therefore can live anywhere for the time being on a moderate income of around 50K. So, if I could focus all of my time and energy on flying lessons, where would you go? Alaska? Seattle area? I am just interested in a PPL, not commercial, but I want to learn from the best. I also prefer small town airports to big metros. So, lets hear it! |
#3
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Southern California. Weather has a huge effect on how often you can
fly. I trained at SMO Santa Monica and was able to fly almost every day. Now I live in Oregon, and there are nowhere near as many opportunities. SoCal all the way. Plus, you get to learn in a busy airspace that'll prepare you to fly almost anywhere. It's a great learning environment. |
#4
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See, I actually disagree with the idea about learning in busy airspace.
Learn to fly the airplane first, then learn about aviation later. Granted you have to do all that to get a PPL but the noise and distraction of radios, other traffic, VORs and all that jazz really distract from the basics of stick and rudder skills and pilotage. If I had to do it all over again, I'd learn in a Cub or a Taylorcraft at a little farm strip in the middle of nowhere, at least until time for my QXC, then I'd move into a 152 with all the kit and learn how to talk to people. My .02 worth. Also, give some thought to Arizona or Florida which have excellent weather but not the intensity of the traffic that SoCal has. Shawn "Ben Hallert" wrote in message ups.com... Southern California. Weather has a huge effect on how often you can fly. I trained at SMO Santa Monica and was able to fly almost every day. Now I live in Oregon, and there are nowhere near as many opportunities. SoCal all the way. Plus, you get to learn in a busy airspace that'll prepare you to fly almost anywhere. It's a great learning environment. |
#5
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Some great points Shawn, but I wonder if it's that clear cut. I now
live in Oregon where most people learn basically how you described. Something that's becoming increasingly clear is that the pilots around here really don't like using the radio. They get uncomfortable talking to controllers, and talk about how they never file VFR flight plans, use Flight Following, or any of that. The other day, I flew to Portland. When I mentioned where I was going, all the guys in the lounge looked both interested and nervous, and a couple of them made comments to the effect of how they don't feel comfortable in controlled space (presumably class D-). I've heard another pilot refer to class C as his personal class B. Where I learned, I didn't have a choice but to pick up the radio stuff, and it took hardly any time. I don't think I missed out on learning any flying basics, and the added load during training with the instructor onboard helped me learn important cockpit resource management. I have a feeling that people who learn in the boonies might be at disadvantage when entering stricter airspace. Not because they are worse pilots, but because they're having to spend brainpower figuring out/using unfamiliar radio procedures while navigating in a high traffic, unfamiliar environment. I had that, but I learned with an instructor in the right seat to be my net until I had it down pat. I mentioned that I had transitioned class bravo down in SoCal, and only one other guy at the lounge had done that, and it was this alien, exciting thing for them to hear about. These guys are way better pilots then I am, but high traffic/class bcd airspace intimidates them, and that's just not right. |
#6
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Ben,
I think there's a valid point in what you're saying. Lack of confidence keeps people from really going out and experiencing things they've learned about, and that needs to be overcome. What it points to for me is that maybe there ought to be two phases to training, more distinct than they are now. There's the flying part, (Cub, farmstrip, stick and rudder) and there's the aviation part (radios, nav aids, ATC, other officialdom). Many of the pilots I know are perfectly comfortable going into Class D airspace but would by absolutely useless in anything other than near perfect conditions and enormous runways - they can aviate but they can't fly. I learned at Scott AFB, mixing it up with C-9s, helos, A-10s and anything else that came in transient. Every movement was with full ATC. I could handle all that stuff. But I didn't learn how to really fly an airplane until I got into a Cub group and spent hours in the pattern learning how to really handle the machine. My point, I guess, is that radio skills and aviation confidence are necessary, but I'd rather see someone learn how to fly the airplane properly before being distracted with the other things too early in training. But, that's just how I see it from the perspective of a 400 hour PPL, so that's all the value the opinion has. I guess it's a bit like learning to drive. Your old man probably took you to an enormous parking lot somewhere first so you could learn how to work the pedals and turn the car without hitting anything. Later he took you out on the streets where you had to deal with traffic lights, signs, and other drivers. Shawn "Ben Hallert" wrote in message oups.com... Some great points Shawn, but I wonder if it's that clear cut. I now live in Oregon where most people learn basically how you described. Something that's becoming increasingly clear is that the pilots around here really don't like using the radio. They get uncomfortable talking to controllers, and talk about how they never file VFR flight plans, use Flight Following, or any of that. The other day, I flew to Portland. When I mentioned where I was going, all the guys in the lounge looked both interested and nervous, and a couple of them made comments to the effect of how they don't feel comfortable in controlled space (presumably class D-). I've heard another pilot refer to class C as his personal class B. Where I learned, I didn't have a choice but to pick up the radio stuff, and it took hardly any time. I don't think I missed out on learning any flying basics, and the added load during training with the instructor onboard helped me learn important cockpit resource management. I have a feeling that people who learn in the boonies might be at disadvantage when entering stricter airspace. Not because they are worse pilots, but because they're having to spend brainpower figuring out/using unfamiliar radio procedures while navigating in a high traffic, unfamiliar environment. I had that, but I learned with an instructor in the right seat to be my net until I had it down pat. I mentioned that I had transitioned class bravo down in SoCal, and only one other guy at the lounge had done that, and it was this alien, exciting thing for them to hear about. These guys are way better pilots then I am, but high traffic/class bcd airspace intimidates them, and that's just not right. |
#7
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![]() "ShawnD2112" wrote in message . uk... See, I actually disagree with the idea about learning in busy airspace. Learn to fly the airplane first, then learn about aviation later. Granted you have to do all that to get a PPL but the noise and distraction of radios, other traffic, VORs and all that jazz really distract from the basics of stick and rudder skills and pilotage. Well, the instructor could be doing most of the radio work for the beginning flights, and you would be listening in, learning. When the instructor thought you were more comfortable, you could start doing the radio work. It must work, since tons of people have done it that way. But, .... Different strokes for different folks, makes the world go round. -- Jim in NC |
#8
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Exactly, Jim, and that's how I learned as well. Only after gaining some
experience (and, to be fair, deciding that spam-can cross country flying wasn't what I wanted to do) did I start to form this view. Not appropriate for someone looking to really go places in airplanes or a commercial-soon-to-be, maybe, but for my style of flying it would be very suitable. Cheers, Shawn "Morgans" wrote in message ... "ShawnD2112" wrote in message . uk... See, I actually disagree with the idea about learning in busy airspace. Learn to fly the airplane first, then learn about aviation later. Granted you have to do all that to get a PPL but the noise and distraction of radios, other traffic, VORs and all that jazz really distract from the basics of stick and rudder skills and pilotage. Well, the instructor could be doing most of the radio work for the beginning flights, and you would be listening in, learning. When the instructor thought you were more comfortable, you could start doing the radio work. It must work, since tons of people have done it that way. But, .... Different strokes for different folks, makes the world go round. -- Jim in NC |
#9
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On Sat, 21 May 2005 15:44:58 GMT, "ShawnD2112"
wrote: If I had to do it all over again, I'd learn in a Cub or a Taylorcraft at a little farm strip in the middle of nowhere, at least until time for my QXC, then I'd move into a 152 with all the kit and learn how to talk to people. Given that the poster said he had six months to do it in, I think this is a great idea. Come to Hampton NH this summer or early fall and solo the Cub, meanwhile enjoying the beach life. Then go off to San Diego CA and do the spam can / ATC bit. Then it's late enough in the year to brave Chandler AZ and do stalls and aerobatics in a two-cockpit Great Lakes biplane.... That will be six months to remember the rest of his life. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#10
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ShawnD2112 wrote:
If I had to do it all over again, I'd learn in a Cub or a Taylorcraft at a little farm strip in the middle of nowhere, at least until time for my QXC, then I'd move into a 152 with all the kit and learn how to talk to people. Hi Shawn, I am in the middle of getting my taildragger endorsement - in a 1944 J-3 Cub. This baby was built for the Army and has the birdcage for the back seat - great visibility. I find it outrageous fun. I got my PPL with 152's and moved to Warriors after that. But this...so much more fun, more challenging, in it's own way. Doing this makes me wonder, at times, if students would be better off starting out in something like a J-3. I think learning TD's makes me a much better pilot..because it's a J-3 with a narrower envelope than even a 152 or a Warrior; because TD flying takes "feel" - especially since you can't always see what few instruments you have with a CFI in front...and what few you have don't include things like Turn and Bank and Artificial Horizons or vert speed, etc. so, for example, your eyes have to be on the horizon, in turns. All that's a benefit, as I say, but it might extend time to solo out, and these days people like to progress quickly. So starting students out in TD's might not be best overall. It might add too many complications at the start. But oftentimes I wonder if it would be worth it. -- Saville Replicas of 15th-19th century nautical navigational instruments: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/backstaffhome.html Restoration of my 82 year old Herreshoff S-Boat sailboat: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/SBOATrestore.htm Steambending FAQ with photos: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/Steambend.htm |
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