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#41
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message CJ, "NW", and I all fly in roughly the same area. There are numerous well-qualified schools and instructors here who are perfectly willing to train students in actual conditions. Right across the river from NW, I trained in and then passed my exam in IMC. Piece of cake. -c |
#42
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![]() Oh, yeah...and if you have time to burn and still want to save money, check out the aviation program at Mt Hood Community College. You'd still fly locally--I still recommend Gorge Winds over the other FBO--but MHCC has an instrument simulator as well that is $50/hr with instruction. Having said that, I never used the sim. Now I'm looking at extending my financial debt to pay for my commercial training. : -c |
#43
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That's a fair statement that I didn't consider because of my own
experience. It largely depends on what the student's experience level is. When I started my IFR training, I had around 200 hours of flight time, mostly PIC, mostly Cross Country. When I sat down with my instructor and the syllabus, the first two flights took us through something like Lesson #22 because controlling the plane to IFR PTS tolerances was not an issue. However, someone who has 75 hours of flight experience of which 65 hours were training for his PPL is probably not going to be able to start with the IFR training, and would probably not be a good candidate for significant flight in the soup. (Flight through some a layer of Scattered Cumulus might not be a bad thing even at that experience level though.) Journeyman wrote in : In article , Judah wrote: I could be wrong, but I suspect that most CFIIs prefer to give their IFR students SOME actual before the training is over. I know several of the instructors that I have worked with in the past believed strongly that the sensation of actual is unique for someone who has sat behind foggles for all of his training, and prefer to be in the right seat the first time it happens to a student. I've talked to CFIs who moved to Seattle specifically to get IMC time for themselves. Of course they'll train in IMC. OTOH, I'm not sure how eager a CFI would be taking someone up IMC during the first, oh, 1/3 of the training, where you're just doing basic attitude flying by instruments. I remember days early on my IFR training, where we'd file to VFR on top, get through the cloud layer, do the maneuvers, then shoot an instrument approach back to base. Morris |
#44
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![]() "gatt" wrote in message ... "C J Campbell" wrote in message Good flight instructors are as picky about their students as good students are picky of their flight instructors. If a student gives me the creeps, is rude, or has an attitude problem, he can take his business elsewhere. It's a good idea to actually meet a potential customer before you pass judgements on him. Absolutely. Otherwise how would you know what kind of a guy he is? |
#45
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Just a thought to pass on to anyone who thinks one customer doesn't mean
anything: Source: White House Office of Consumer Affairs. · For every customer who bothers to complain, there are 26 others who remain silent. · The average “wronged” customer will tell 8 to 16 people. · 91% of unhappy customers will never purchase services from you again. · It costs about fives times as much to attract a new customer as it costs to keep an old one. · Bottom Line – For every complaint, there are about 250 more customers with problems or potential customers who hear bad things about you. FWIW. We found this to be true in our business. We lived by it. Victor J. (Jim) Osborne, Jr. |
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