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#1
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I was going to ask this question on R.A.Students but I think this is a
more appropriate forum. After how many hours of dual do you expect the average person to be ready to solo? I understand that it is subjective. Not every person is ready to solo at the same time. There are a number of fundamentals that you require before you are ready to turn a person loose. There is no urgency in getting allowing them to solo. Safety is the most important criterium. Etcetras. Long, long ago an instructor told me a ball-park number of ten hours. He said he expected to take that long, plus or minus a couple hours, to drill the fundamentals into a student. What's been your average? |
#2
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"Casey Wilson" N2310D @ gmail.com wrote in message
news ![]() [...] I understand that it is subjective. Not every person is ready to solo at the same time. There are a number of fundamentals that you require before you are ready to turn a person loose. There is no urgency in getting allowing them to solo. Safety is the most important criterium. Etcetras. Don't forget that it also depends heavily on the airport environment. At a busy controlled airport (to name a particular kind of extreme...uncontrolled airports can be busy too), a student may have the flying skills required to solo, but still need additional time practicing on the radio. Additionally, at a busy controlled airport, the practice area is often farther away, resulting in a higher logged number of hours for a given number of effective training hours. [...] What's been your average? IMHO, if you are asking "what's been your average" and expect to do anything useful with that information, you need to be more specific about why you think you need that information. You can't collect responses here (or any similar forum) and expect to come up with anything that is relevant to anything. Pete |
#3
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"Casey Wilson" wrote
What's been your average? 12-15 hours Bob Moore ATP CFI since 1970 PanAm (retired) |
#4
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Ditto here for a country uncontrolled field.
Roughly +50% for a controlled field in a class B or military environment .... like Montgomery in San Diego with Miramar MCAS a couple of miles north and San Diego Int'l a couple of miles south. Jim Also CFI since 3 Dec 1970 "Bob Moore" wrote in message . 121... "Casey Wilson" wrote What's been your average? 12-15 hours Bob Moore ATP CFI since 1970 PanAm (retired) |
#5
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On average between 15-20 hours. When I began instructing in the mid
60's the emphasis was on getting a student soloed under 10 hours. But, it was and is my opinion that when that student goes up for the first time, they better be ready to handle oddball things that come up on a regular basis. When I first start with them, I tell them solo is just one step in the route to a private license and there should be no major rush. When I step out of the aircraft, I am comfortable that the student can go to the practice area and do every maneuver required on the private check ride and do so safely. I recently finished a student who never flew with anyone else. He soloed at about 17 hours and got his private check ride out of the way at 41.5 hours. Now he has gone to another operator to start on his instrument rating as I left the area. Ol Shy & Bashful CFI/AIRM-Gold Seal 1968 |
#6
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After how many hours of dual do you expect the average person to be
ready to solo? The earliest I've soloed someone is 17 hours. I'm sure my average is over 20. The FAA has a list of required training before a student can solo. If you wanted to, you could run through that training in a couple of hours. My feeling is that the student should be *proficient* at all those maneuvers. Teaching a forward slip just once prior to solo is useless; the student must be good enough at it to have it as part of his toolbox. Realistically, I'm not sure that the emphasis on solo is such a great thing. Perhaps putting the solo after the dual cross-country phase would make more sense. |
#7
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According to the Cessna CFI management computer, 12.4 hours for me; between
12 and 14 hours for everybody in our school. |
#8
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Relax Peter. Casey is either new or is hung up on a particular
student. Experience will tell you when a student is ready, as when he can take you on a local flight safely without your intervention. If unsure, have the Chief Pilot or another instructor give a phase check for proficiency. I once soloed a student in 6.8 hours, an outstanding individual. Some others who took much, much longer simply weren't hitting the books. Bush ATPCFIIASMEL On Sat, 19 Feb 2005 18:12:36 GMT, "Casey Wilson" N2310D @ gmail.com wrote: I was going to ask this question on R.A.Students but I think this is a more appropriate forum. After how many hours of dual do you expect the average person to be ready to solo? I understand that it is subjective. Not every person is ready to solo at the same time. There are a number of fundamentals that you require before you are ready to turn a person loose. There is no urgency in getting allowing them to solo. Safety is the most important criterium. Etcetras. Long, long ago an instructor told me a ball-park number of ten hours. He said he expected to take that long, plus or minus a couple hours, to drill the fundamentals into a student. What's been your average? |
#9
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![]() "Bushleague" wrote in message ... Relax Peter. Casey is either new or is hung up on a particular student. None of the above. Casey Wilson Freelance Writer and Photographer Experience will tell you when a student is ready, as when he can take you on a local flight safely without your intervention. If unsure, have the Chief Pilot or another instructor give a phase check for proficiency. I once soloed a student in 6.8 hours, an outstanding individual. Some others who took much, much longer simply weren't hitting the books. Bush ATPCFIIASMEL On Sat, 19 Feb 2005 18:12:36 GMT, "Casey Wilson" N2310D @ gmail.com wrote: I was going to ask this question on R.A.Students but I think this is a more appropriate forum. After how many hours of dual do you expect the average person to be ready to solo? I understand that it is subjective. Not every person is ready to solo at the same time. There are a number of fundamentals that you require before you are ready to turn a person loose. There is no urgency in getting allowing them to solo. Safety is the most important criterium. Etcetras. Long, long ago an instructor told me a ball-park number of ten hours. He said he expected to take that long, plus or minus a couple hours, to drill the fundamentals into a student. What's been your average? |
#10
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I have developed the policy that I just will not solo anybody with less
than 10 hrs, unless they have previous (not logged) flight expirence. My feeling is that the student should just be exposed to at least 10 hours of what kind of stuff happens in and around pattern. It is not all that uncommon for me to have students that are ready to solo in 5-7 hours (Advantage of a non-tower airport) but I don't want to set that expectation for the my students, Plus it is easy and probably beneficial to go ahead and start working on ATC practice or Cross Country Navigation Skills to build them up to the 10 hrs I require for them to solo. Brian CFIIG/ASEL |
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