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Hi All,
Firstly apologise if this is not the correct group to post to (My first time ;0) I'm thinking about taking up flying and have found a few schools in the US that seem quite resonable (for price and facilities). They offer several courses - i've narrowed it down to two: 'PPL Private Pilot License' and 'CAA/JAA Private Pilot License'. Can someone tell me what the difference between the two types of license is? I've had a good rake around and can't seem to find anything! I would like to at some point get a night and IMC rating so with this is mind does anyone have any suggestions on what I should go for (license wise)? Lastly, there are several aircraft to choose from on each course: Cessna 152, Cessna 172 and Piper PA28. Does anyone have any recommendations for choosing an aircraft for learning to fly in? Regards, John. |
#2
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![]() I'm thinking about taking up flying and have found a few schools in the US that seem quite resonable (for price and facilities). They offer several courses - i've narrowed it down to two: 'PPL Private Pilot License' and 'CAA/JAA Private Pilot License'. Can someone tell me what the difference between the two types of license is? I've had a good rake around and can't seem to find anything! CAA/JAA is the European curiculum. You need that if you're a European citizen and want to be able to fly a European registered aircraft at any time. If you're not an EU citizen an FAA PPL is enough, which is a lot easier to get (the European guidelines are far stricter, as is the medical). I would like to at some point get a night and IMC rating so with this is mind does anyone have any suggestions on what I should go for (license wise)? You always start out with PPL. After that you can do extra training (and exams) for night and IFR ratings, multi-engine rating, etc. etc. Lastly, there are several aircraft to choose from on each course: Cessna 152, Cessna 172 and Piper PA28. Does anyone have any recommendations for choosing an aircraft for learning to fly in? Doesn't matter much, except for cost (152 being cheapest, Pipers usually the most expensive). I find 152s too small (I'm rather large) and cramped. Finding a school that has well maintained aircraft AND good instructors is more important that finding one that has fancy aircraft. |
#3
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"John" wrote in message
news ![]() I'm thinking about taking up flying and have found a few schools in the US that seem quite resonable (for price and facilities). They offer several courses - i've narrowed it down to two: 'PPL Private Pilot License' and 'CAA/JAA Private Pilot License'. Can someone tell me what the difference between the two types of license is? I've had a good rake around and can't seem to find anything! In the UK at least, a "PPL" and a "JAA PPL" are synonymous. The basic requirement is 45 hours' flying (a mix of dual and solo) plus the passing a of a number of multiple-guess ground examinations (oh, and a medical and a practical radiotelephony exam). There is a new licence in the UK, called the National PPL (NPPL); the basic requirement is officially less hours, and the medical is less strict, but you tend to find that most people need 40-something hours to be competent anyway, so it's probably worth going for the full PPL unless you have a medical problem that prevents you passing a Class 2 JAR medical (but which doesn't prevent you passing the NPPL one, whose medical requirements are equivalent to those of an HGV driver, and which are signed off by your GP, not necessarily a specialist aviation medical examiner). I would like to at some point get a night and IMC rating so with this is mind does anyone have any suggestions on what I should go for (license wise)? The IMC and night ratings are both useful, and are both unavailable if you go for an NPPL. If you do the night rating before the IMC, you have a couple of hours knocked off the requirement for the IMC course, so you save a bit of money. I have a colour vision problem and so I couldn't do a night rating, so I had to do the full 15 hours for the IMC. Lastly, there are several aircraft to choose from on each course: Cessna 152, Cessna 172 and Piper PA28. Does anyone have any recommendations for choosing an aircraft for learning to fly in? These are all fairly standard training aircraft. The C152 is small and will be cheaper to fly than the other two, but once you've got your licence you might want to do a type conversion onto either a 172 or a PA-28 so that you can take up to three passengers beside yourself. I learned in a PA26-161 Warrior simply because I was too heavy to fly the C152 alongside an instructor! Now I'm five stone lighter I may do a conversion onto the C152 just for the sake of being able to fly something a bit cheaper, but to be honest I like the spacious nature of our club PA28 (a different, newer Warrior) so I may well just stick with that. My brother-in-law is learning in a C172 due to a similar weight restriction! D. |
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