
November 3rd 04, 12:10 PM
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Steven Barnes wrote:
I think trying different instructors is a good idea. During my primary I had
a couple different instructors before I settled on someone who did a great
job & finished the private. He started me on the instrument, but due to time
constraints I ended up finishing the IR with another instructor. I could see
some similarities in styles & approaches (pun intended), but quite a few
differences, too. Made for learning different ways of looking at things.
Bottom line: Try someone new. If it isn't working out, dump 'em & go back to
your current instructor. This current instructor shouldn't have a problem
with you wanting to see different viewpoints on things.
"Dave Jacobowitz" wrote in message
om...
Here's a question for the group: I've got a flight instructor that I
work well with. I finished my private with him and did my entire
instrument rating with him. I want to start on my commercial (SE, and
then CFI, CFII, and later ME) and was wondering if there is any good
reason to look for someone new to train with.
To give some background, when working on my private I had some bad
luck. The first guy I worked with was a timebuilder. I don't even want
to say how many hours I had before I soloed, suffice it so say that I
was probably taken advantage of. Later, he got an job with a commuter
in Florida, and was gone. My second instructor, who soloed me probably
on my second or third lesson (hmm...) was a good guy, but he had to
relocate when his job at UAL went away. (he wasn't a pilot, but an
A&P).
Anyway, my current instructor is good. He's definitely of the
old-school mold: great stick, kind of irritable, smart, ATP gazillion
hours, nitpicky, occasionally absent-minded, has some strange ideas
about how the world does/ought to work He's one of those guys who
is happy to fly GPS approaches, but can't quite mask his derision for
pilots who "need to see the little airplane on the moving map." Of
course, we all know he has a point, but he's not the most politic
person in the world.
So, I get along with this guy, and I've done two ratings with him, so
the question is if there really is anything to be gained by finding
somebody else to fly with someone new, just for a different
perspective? Different style of piloting? I suspect that the answer is
yes, but is it worth it? What are the odds that the next guy I fly
with is going to be a flake?
It probably helps to share my long-term goals. I do *not* want to be
an airline pilot. I have another career, which, though not the stuff
of dreams, pays nicely. What I do want to do is get my CFI and have a
student or two at a time, flying weekends, etc, maybe have a part-time
income for when I'm "retired." Sometimes I think that maybe I could do
some corporate flying one day if I one the lottery first. (or my
company went IPO, which has seems to have similar odds)
Also, I just like to pursue ratings, because I enjoy the challenge and
the learning.
Just soliciting opinions... What do you guys think?
thanks!
jacobowitz73 --at-- yahoo --dot-- com
There is a cost associated with switching instructors. If you are
wealthy, this isn't and issue for you. But the real measure is whether
you are progressing at the rate you think you should, not only flying,
but learning how and why you do things (see discussion of juggling radios).
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