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"steve" wrote: It is a piper Arrow with retractable gear and constant speed prop. What year model is it? Is it a 180 or 200 HP model? Hershey bar or taper wing? T-tail or straight tail? Download the Piper Cherokee and Arrow document http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/highlights.html This is a good review document for the PA28 series I have 4 hours as training for my complex rating, and will have an additional 4-6 hours on Monday because I will be taking it out to practice most of the day. Go to http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/ Source of lots of good refresher material My total time flying is 120 hours, 100 of which happened 20 years ago. The good thing is that I am much more thorough and aware of my own mortality than I was when younger. Essentially, you are starting over and can be considered a low-time pilot. Although you have over 100 hours, which is probably the minimum required by insurance for checkout, all your experience is very recent, by your own admission. The Arrow will take you more than 10 hours be really comfortable with. It has a high sink rate with the power off. The main landing gear is six-inches shorter than a fixed gear Archer, meaning that you have to manage your energy on short final to make a smooth arrival. You do not want to drop it in. There are two ways to look at your proposed trip. One, you have to try new things to learn. There is nothing like flying off to a new destination in a new/different airplane. Two, what you don't know can kill you. Get some more time in the airplane, then take your wife. The checkout requirement for the Turbo Arrow IV belonging to the club I am a member of has the following checkout minimum: 150+ hours total, 25+ hours retract, 10+ hours (or 5+ dual) make and model and complex endorsement required. Also, the other person going with me has his complex rating also, so we will have two pilots in the plane. That can be both good and bad. How much time in the Arrow does the other pilot have? How much total complex time does the other pilot have? Two pilots, no cockpit resource management training, right? Prior to flight, be sure to define each persons roles and responsibilities during the flight. |
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