Probably bad instruction.
3-4 hours of attitude flying instruction at most should be plenty to
provide the skills to enable anyone to move on to navigational work
and procedures.
After all, all navigation/procedural work requires attitude flying, so
you will get plenty of practice and plenty of time over the next 35
hours or so of instruction to fine-tune any minor attitude flying
problems.
Any instructor who requires his instrument student to be perfect in
his attitude flying before moving on is just wasting his student's
money. 13-14 hours of attitude flying before moving on is a waste, if
you ask me (but maybe you're not asking).
On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 15:38:15 GMT, "C Kingsbury"
wrote:
I guess I was a slow student.
wrote in message
.. .
On Sun, 12 Dec 2004 19:02:14 GMT, "C Kingsbury"
wrote:
One-third of the instrument rating is learning attitude flying- how to
fly
S&L, make turns, climbs, and descents accurate by reference to
instruments
only
13-14 hours to learn how to atttitude fly?
Either you got a slow student or a bad instructor, in my opinion.
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