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#1
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Hello.
I just completed the last of the three written exams for my Airframe & Powerplant rating. So I no longer have an excuse to put off the oral and practical test! Any words of wisdom for how to best prepare for this test? Also, should I go for both licenses in a single O&P session, or study and test separately? I am also wondering how the general knowledge questions are handled. Are these included in the airframe O&P, or are they split between the two O&P tests? Thanks -Mark |
#2
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AS the applicant, you have to provide the place for the
test. If you have attended a school, such as SPARTAN or a community college, they will have the facilities, such as a welding shop, tools and aircraft for you to use for the test. http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-26.pdf http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-27.pdf http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-28.pdf Links to the A&P PTS I would plan on two days for both certificates. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Mark" wrote in message ... | Hello. | | I just completed the last of the three written exams for my | Airframe & Powerplant rating. So I no longer have an excuse | to put off the oral and practical test! | | Any words of wisdom for how to best prepare for this test? | Also, should I go for both licenses in a single O&P session, | or study and test separately? | | I am also wondering how the general knowledge questions | are handled. Are these included in the airframe O&P, | or are they split between the two O&P tests? | | Thanks | -Mark | | |
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"Jim Macklin" wrote:
AS the applicant, you have to provide the place for the test. If you have attended a school, such as SPARTAN or a community college, they will have the facilities, such as a welding shop, tools and aircraft for you to use for the test. http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-26.pdf http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-27.pdf http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-28.pdf Links to the A&P PTS I would plan on two days for both certificates. Jim: Thanks for posting the PTS links, I had not located those yet. AFAIK, our local examiners have their own facilities available for administering the tests. I haven't heard of any of the students from my program (community college) testing at the school. |
#4
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![]() Mark wrote: "Jim Macklin" wrote: AS the applicant, you have to provide the place for the test. If you have attended a school, such as SPARTAN or a community college, they will have the facilities, such as a welding shop, tools and aircraft for you to use for the test. Most any DME will have a host facility they prefer to use and it is generally part of the test. An aside: something like 25% of A&P school grads never actually get their licenses and of those who do many never use it or leave aviation maintenance permanently in their first twelve months of employment. Unless you're a pilot looking to use it to leverage a jet right seat or want a piece of paper to show off at the watering hole it's not much of an economic asset anymore. Getting the license by experience is the only way that makes any sense to me-A&P schools are largely a total ripoff. We have one out here that advertises in the paper with photos of corporate jets taking off and the inside of the GE Cincinnati plant-their "school" actually is a converted LTL truck terminal in the middle of nowhere with a junked Queen Air and some old dead RR Vipers that are far from runnable. Course cost is $30,000 and rising again in May. The few grads getting hired in town are going to work for $12-14 an hour as combination line service and shop, second and third shift, at the ONE FBO that will hire them (and, oh yes-a $5/hr discount on Sundowner rental if they want flight training there.) |
#5
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Mark wrote:
Hello. I just completed the last of the three written exams for my Airframe & Powerplant rating. So I no longer have an excuse to put off the oral and practical test! Any words of wisdom for how to best prepare for this test? Also, should I go for both licenses in a single O&P session, or study and test separately? I am also wondering how the general knowledge questions are handled. Are these included in the airframe O&P, or are they split between the two O&P tests? Thanks -Mark I can tell you how mine was handled, but I did my A&P at a large university that does this every semester, and really has the program down. This particular university books out two days for the O&P's. I'm assuming some people need more time, but I don't know anyone who did. We started off with the oral, which took four or five hours, and included the questions for the general, airframe, and powerplant. Good thing about that was that I was largely left alone during the practical part of it. I was basically given a list of projects to do, and worked through them in whatever order I wanted to. The most annoying one was having to taxi...here I was, a CFI, being tested on my taxiing ability. :-) Anyway, I didn't have a problem doing both in one session, even though I was jetlagged (you know, last minute overseas trip before commencement sounded good at the time...). I think I did nine hours the first day and six or seven the second day. It was hard, but much lower key than my three CFI checkrides. I'll tell you the same thing about the oral I tell all my students before checkrides...don't volunteer information. Answer the question and only the question. Don't elaborate. Remember, the DME won't fail you for omitting information (he'll just question you further), but if you volunteer incorrect information, it's a bust, even if it's something he didn't ask about. Some people will tell you that DE's will give you more trouble if you did poorly on a written. I saw that once with one of my instrument students, but with my A&P, he just seemed to want to do it efficiently. My lowest score was an 85 on the airframe, and I didn't notice any extra questioning on that part. Not sure if there are any oral exam prep books like for pilot ratings, but those are very helpful. My only other piece of advice is not to leave your copy of AC43.13 in a hotel room in Paris two days before the O&P's, but I think most people are more intelligent than I was. Good luck! |
#6
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Bret Ludwig wrote:
snip An aside: something like 25% of A&P school grads never actually get their licenses and of those who do many never use it or leave aviation maintenance permanently in their first twelve months of employment. Unless you're a pilot looking to use it to leverage a jet right seat or want a piece of paper to show off at the watering hole it's not much of an economic asset anymore. Really? Everyone I went to school with got their A&P (except one guy who couldn't pass). All but two of us are still in aviation. I've only had two jobs out of college, but I got both because I had the A&P. And a nice per year bonus for having it. Getting the license by experience is the only way that makes any sense to me-A&P schools are largely a total ripoff. We have one out here that advertises in the paper with photos of corporate jets taking off and the inside of the GE Cincinnati plant-their "school" actually is a converted LTL truck terminal in the middle of nowhere with a junked Queen Air and some old dead RR Vipers that are far from runnable. Course cost is $30,000 and rising again in May. IMHO, anyone who doesn't do research into a school like this is asking for trouble. I have zero experience with other schools, but mine definitely wasn't what you described above. The few grads getting hired in town are going to work for $12-14 an hour as combination line service and shop, second and third shift, at the ONE FBO that will hire them (and, oh yes-a $5/hr discount on Sundowner rental if they want flight training there.) Funny...my school has a 100% placement rate most years, and the average starting salary is $37,000 a year. Not great, but better than $12-14 an hour. |
#7
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"Bret Ludwig" wrote:
Getting the license by experience is the only way that makes any sense to me-A&P schools are largely a total ripoff. I have heard that about some of the private schools, like the one you cited. $30k for A&P training? Absurd. That sounds like a scam targeted at government-financed "retraining" programs for displaced workers. Community colleges can be a good deal though. I went through a program at a community college near Seattle, and the cost was about $850/quarter plus whatever I spent on tools. That's about seven grand for the school, plus the testing costs which are the same no matter how you qualify. Having said that, these are _not_ profitable programs at such prices. We have four or five community college A&P programs here in WA State, with three in the Seattle area. I hear that's quite a lot to choose from. College administrators can really improve their bottom line by shutting down the expensive A&P programs and replacing them with liberal arts curricula, where they get the same tuition and only have to provide an instructor and a classroom. As for the pay, well. . .that's another discussion. If you just want to turn a wrench on airplanes, there's a big repair station nearby here that will hire you without an A&P, and their starting pay is comparable to what you mentioned. They do pay a small hourly premium for an Airframe ticket though. |
#8
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I would contact the examiner well before the test and
discuss the procedures, any materials you need to bring, etc. If you have documents and reference materials, I would be sure to bring everything along. Bring your welding goggles, gloves and other small tools. The shop where you will test should have sheet metal brakes, but you should bring your tools. Good luck. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Mark" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote: | AS the applicant, you have to provide the place for the | test. If you have attended a school, such as SPARTAN or a | community college, they will have the facilities, such as a | welding shop, tools and aircraft for you to use for the | test. | http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-26.pdf | http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-27.pdf | http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...-S-8081-28.pdf | Links to the A&P PTS | | I would plan on two days for both certificates. | | Jim: | | Thanks for posting the PTS links, I had not located those yet. | | AFAIK, our local examiners have their own facilities available for | administering | the tests. I haven't heard of any of the students from my program (community | college) testing at the school. | | |
#9
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![]() Mark wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote: Getting the license by experience is the only way that makes any sense to me-A&P schools are largely a total ripoff. I have heard that about some of the private schools, like the one you cited. $30k for A&P training? Absurd. That sounds like a scam targeted at government-financed "retraining" programs for displaced workers. Community colleges can be a very good deal getting you an A.S. degree and your A&P ticket for a reasonable outlay and for the just-starting-out set are a reasonable deal. If the instruction is good the skills are yours whether or not you go in aviation. Some will get you the FCC GROL as well, but that's pretty easy anyway. But in every city such schools abound. The one out here is euphemistically called "Aviation Institute of Maintenance". I have three or four acquaintences that have taught or interviewed to teach out there. I got the guided tour as a prospective student and thought I'd die laughing at the place. The recruiter weighed at least 600 lbs. and the head of training is a moonlighting clergyman. |
#10
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![]() "Mark" wrote in message ... Hello. I just completed the last of the three written exams for my Airframe & Powerplant rating. So I no longer have an excuse to put off the oral and practical test! Any words of wisdom for how to best prepare for this test? Also, should I go for both licenses in a single O&P session, or study and test separately? I did the oral at the examiner's residence and the practical the next day at his hangar. This was the way he preferred and I think it's better to spread it over two days. I am also wondering how the general knowledge questions are handled. Are these included in the airframe O&P, or are they split between the two O&P tests? On the oral, the examiner must ask a certain number of questions in each category; the choice is his. My examiner was kind enough to ask me what I was weak on and chose the questions accordingly. I believe there is a certain amount leniency on what practical subjects the examiner chooses, again he ask me about my weak/strong suits. What I had looked forward to with dread turned out to be a very enjoyable experience |
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