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#41
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![]() Talk to Marv or Delcy at Gorge Winds Aviation in Troutdale. 503.665.2823 I did my instrument ground and practical work through them and passed both the written and the checkride on the first try in October. Heck, you could just fly your ol' hoss across the river. If it's not IFR equipped, they train in a 180hp Cessna 172 that's a really nice plane. Rates are $80/hr for the airplane and $35/hr for the instructor, but instruction time comes right off the Hobbes. They do weekend IFR written prep courses three or four times a year and there's a testing facility onsite. Delcy is an Air Force Academy graduate and an officer in the US Air Force Reserve, and Marv, the FBO owner, is a retired deputy sheriff, former mayor and retired career Marine. -Really- good people. Troutdale is a great airport and most of the practice work is out of Battleground VOR to Scapoose, or Aurora, Hillsboro and McMinnville. -gattman "NW_PILOT" wrote in message ... "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... "Almarz" wrote in message ... In any event, if you don't like ANYTHING about a place where you're plunking your money down, take it elsewhere! Screw the folks that are turning it around and blaming it on you. It's all about the CUSTOMER. When these slobs realize that, they'll be better off. Until then, let them bitch and complain about how they can't make a living. Good flight instructors are as picky about their students as good students are picky of their flight instructors. If a student gives me the creeps, is rude, or has an attitude problem, he can take his business elsewhere. I agree but its my money I am spending and it had to be earned with hard work! I have already been shafted once on my private training and had to go finish at another flight school witch ended up costing me more money than I needed to spend. I guess the education I recived from that experience was worth the extra money spent. I will not make them mistakes again! Some flight instructor or fbo is going to get a large chunk of http://www.warflying.net/money.jpg and its not going to be someone that don't want to work, is under qualified or a company I feel is not going to give what they agreed upon. Someone like me that want to fly 3 more hours per day 5 times a week needs an instructor around that can accommodate my schedule. I want to make dame sure an instructor will show up on time also. The instructor must also have the experience and the knowledge that I seek to learn from. Being a flight instructor for a living makes you a business. I could see flight instructors doing it on the side with little free time picking and chousing their students but I don't want to here one complaint on how they are not making any money! If they work an FBO and the FBO brings them students then they should not be so picky until they at leased fly with the student. Not every one is perfect, not every one learns the material int the same way. That is why their are many flight instructors out there. My first primarry flight instructor was a good instructor but had a bit of an attitude when you did something wrong and was not calm he scared me a little. My second primarry flight instructor was an Excellent Flight instructor but worked for a FBO that was not stable and the owners were a bunch of crooks. Wish he did not give up flight instruction for the airlines or we would not be having this conversation I would have paid him $50.00 or more an hour to be able to have him as my instructor for my instrument rating. He did not hold any of his knowledge or skills back and was a straight forward and adapted to my learning style. I have flown with a few other flight instructors, most were not very professional and will not adapt to my learning style so I am seeking out other areas to meet my instruction needs. |
#42
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message CJ, "NW", and I all fly in roughly the same area. There are numerous well-qualified schools and instructors here who are perfectly willing to train students in actual conditions. Right across the river from NW, I trained in and then passed my exam in IMC. Piece of cake. -c |
#43
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![]() Oh, yeah...and if you have time to burn and still want to save money, check out the aviation program at Mt Hood Community College. You'd still fly locally--I still recommend Gorge Winds over the other FBO--but MHCC has an instrument simulator as well that is $50/hr with instruction. Having said that, I never used the sim. Now I'm looking at extending my financial debt to pay for my commercial training. : -c |
#44
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
Okay, well, I'll defer to your experience. Most of my non-training IFR flights have involved a lot of straight and level, with the occasional maneuver mixed in just to keep me awake. For early training, this seems like a lot of wasted time. But if you got a lot out of it, then who am I to argue? And maybe you're one of those people who 'got' straight and level right away, and could hold +/-40 ft and +/-5 degrees in smooth air immediately and without much effort. Some people can do that, and probably would not get a lot out of it. However, I do insist on those fairly tight tolerances (in smooth air only - in rough air it's just not practical) before we move on to maneuvers because that level of control will be required for the maneuvers. To this I should add that my CFII took an instrument student on an actual flight that was not as I described above. He flew from CDW to MMU (about 5 miles), flew multiple approaches, and then went back to CDW. That's probably some kind of record, but I have taken a student on an actual flight from DWH to EYQ (9 nm) where we flew three NDB approaches and landed. Thing is, that would have been overload for a new student. With a new student, I would have taken him on a short XC (maybe EYQ-CLL) terminating with a VOR or LOC approach - and I would have configured the radios and done the communications for him, so that he would only have to fly the headings and altitudes I gave him, and at most track a VOR/LOC needle. I will also admit that the workload of doing that (for me as the instructor) is substantially higher than the workload of single pilot IFR in IMC with no autopilot. I'm astonished that TRACON accomodated this in IMC, but it does show that actual flying can be set up to involve little straight and level. TRACON will generally accomodate such requests if traffic permits, which it usually does at the little airports in lousy weather. You would be surprised how little traffic there is at the little airports in hard IFR conditions. Most instrument rated private pilots won't launch into hard IFR. The busy times are actually those of MVFR - that's when everyone is up training. Michael |
#45
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
snip : Okay, well, I'll defer to your experience. Most of my non-training IFR : flights have involved a lot of straight and level, with the occasional : maneuver mixed in just to keep me awake. For early training, this seems : like a lot of wasted time. But if you got a lot out of it, then who am I : to argue? I should have explained more. In addition to straight and level flying I also got exposed to the hardest part of IFR flight: preflight decision making. Anyone can be trained to fly straight and level and fly approaches to the extent required to pass the practical test. What I learned was the whole process. Is the weather OK for a limited-capability aircraft? What if the winds are unfavorable? How far can we go assuming we need an alternate? Which alternate is the best choice? What is the best routing? Why? Where are the MOCA low enough to allow for diversions? Do we want to fly a route that has a MEA at the service ceiling of the A/C? Why not? Etc. (Besides, I had to get the airplane from VNY to 1B9.) The CFII that I hired was/is a good friend of mine. He had been flying charter in New England and Southeastern Canada for a couple years, and was well versed on our local adverse weather conditions (something I am still weak on). -- Aaron C. |
#46
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That's a fair statement that I didn't consider because of my own
experience. It largely depends on what the student's experience level is. When I started my IFR training, I had around 200 hours of flight time, mostly PIC, mostly Cross Country. When I sat down with my instructor and the syllabus, the first two flights took us through something like Lesson #22 because controlling the plane to IFR PTS tolerances was not an issue. However, someone who has 75 hours of flight experience of which 65 hours were training for his PPL is probably not going to be able to start with the IFR training, and would probably not be a good candidate for significant flight in the soup. (Flight through some a layer of Scattered Cumulus might not be a bad thing even at that experience level though.) Journeyman wrote in : In article , Judah wrote: I could be wrong, but I suspect that most CFIIs prefer to give their IFR students SOME actual before the training is over. I know several of the instructors that I have worked with in the past believed strongly that the sensation of actual is unique for someone who has sat behind foggles for all of his training, and prefer to be in the right seat the first time it happens to a student. I've talked to CFIs who moved to Seattle specifically to get IMC time for themselves. Of course they'll train in IMC. OTOH, I'm not sure how eager a CFI would be taking someone up IMC during the first, oh, 1/3 of the training, where you're just doing basic attitude flying by instruments. I remember days early on my IFR training, where we'd file to VFR on top, get through the cloud layer, do the maneuvers, then shoot an instrument approach back to base. Morris |
#47
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![]() "gatt" wrote in message ... "C J Campbell" wrote in message Good flight instructors are as picky about their students as good students are picky of their flight instructors. If a student gives me the creeps, is rude, or has an attitude problem, he can take his business elsewhere. It's a good idea to actually meet a potential customer before you pass judgements on him. Absolutely. Otherwise how would you know what kind of a guy he is? |
#48
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Just a thought to pass on to anyone who thinks one customer doesn't mean
anything: Source: White House Office of Consumer Affairs. · For every customer who bothers to complain, there are 26 others who remain silent. · The average “wronged” customer will tell 8 to 16 people. · 91% of unhappy customers will never purchase services from you again. · It costs about fives times as much to attract a new customer as it costs to keep an old one. · Bottom Line – For every complaint, there are about 250 more customers with problems or potential customers who hear bad things about you. FWIW. We found this to be true in our business. We lived by it. Victor J. (Jim) Osborne, Jr. |
#49
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Michael wrote:
TRACON will generally accomodate such requests if traffic permits, which it usually does at the little airports in lousy weather. Sure, but our neighborhood includes two pretty heavy GA airports: TEB and MMU. So I'm - pleasantly - surprised. It just goes to show, I think, that ATC does work to be accomodating. - Andrew |
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