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Thanks for all the feedback. The common theme is obvious: just know
your limitations, which should go without saying anyway! I'll still be planning on that ticket. Whether or not I go for it some time is relevant to me at the moment because I'm looking at the purchase of a C150 or 152 and need to decide if I need IFR cert. |
#2
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In article k.net, Paul
Folbrecht wrote: Thanks for all the feedback. The common theme is obvious: just know your limitations, which should go without saying anyway! I'll still be planning on that ticket. Whether or not I go for it some time is relevant to me at the moment because I'm looking at the purchase of a C150 or 152 and need to decide if I need IFR cert Having an instrument rating helps to reduce insurance costs. As your friend stated you must be current, having an instrument rating does not make you an instrument pilot. If you have poor judgement getting the instrument rating isn't going to change the outcome, it'll just happen sooner perhaps. G -- Dale L. Falk There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing around with airplanes. http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html |
#3
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Paul Folbrecht wrote
Thanks for all the feedback. The common theme is obvious: just know your limitations, which should go without saying anyway! Just realize that "knowing your limitations" will usually mean limiting your use of the instrument rating to conditions that you could have legally flown VFR. The moment you start using your instrument rating to fly in weather that isn't legally flyable VFR, you need to be thinking real hard about what you are doing. There is a lot of truth to what your friend said. I get a lot of questions about getting an instrument rating from a lot of low time pilots. I'm a practicing CFII; these are all potential customers. I try to talk most of them out of it. It's not that an instrument rating is inherently bad. No training is ever bad. If nothing else, you will spend 40 hours flying in a structured, goal-oriented environment. On top of that, you're guaranteed to learn SOMETHING about IFR flying. The problem is this - if you're not flying 2-3 times a week, that instrument rating is going to come at the cost of something else. If all it replaces is a bunch of $100 hamburger runs under blue skies and over familiar territory, then no great loss. But if time and money are limited, there are lots of things you could do that would be a better use of limited resources to make you a better, safer, and more capable pilot. You could take some training in flying low VFR. If you consider XC flight over relatively flat terrain with 1000 ft ceilings to be scary and not doable under VFR, then I assure you that such training will do far more for your ability to get where you want to go when you want to get there in a light single than an instrument rating ever will. You could fly a taildragger or a glider, you could do aerobatics or formation flying, or you could make cross country mean something and cross the country. I'll still be planning on that ticket. Whether or not I go for it some time is relevant to me at the moment because I'm looking at the purchase of a C150 or 152 and need to decide if I need IFR cert. You might consider a Tomahawk instead. I'm seeing a lot of low time IFR Tomahawks out there in the $20K range. They're not quite as good a soft/rough field airplane as a C-150, but they are better planes in every other respect. Michael |
#4
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Here's my two cents...... Wait on the instrument rating.... Go out and fly
to and visit as many airports and their $100 hamburger opportunities as much as you can. Go out and enjoy that PP-ASEL ticket! For the instrument rating you will need a LOT of drive and determination... IMHO, I think it helps to go out there and get lots of flying in (which will improve,,, hopefully,,,, your flying when you are ready to start the instrument ticket),,, then when the drive for the new challenge and learning opportunity rears its' head... go for it! -- -- =----- Good Flights! Cecil PP-ASEL Student-IASEL Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond! Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery - "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis - "Paul Folbrecht" wrote in message hlink.net... Thanks for all the feedback. The common theme is obvious: just know your limitations, which should go without saying anyway! I'll still be planning on that ticket. Whether or not I go for it some time is relevant to me at the moment because I'm looking at the purchase of a C150 or 152 and need to decide if I need IFR cert. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Instrument Checkride passed (Long) | Paul Folbrecht | Instrument Flight Rules | 10 | February 11th 05 02:41 AM |
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