Reputable Helo Commercial Add-on (VA Approved)

ozziecat35

4 out of 5 great lakes prefer Michigan.
Title says it all. Trying to line up a job in the next 2 years, but they require both a CMEL and Commercial Rotor. If I have Uncle Sam paying for it via the GI Bill, does anyone have a recommendation for an accelerated commercial helo add-on? (Hopefully 2-3 weeks max.)

I have 0 rotor time.
 
Where are you located? I'm currently doing my CFI upgrade at Universal Helicopters in Scottsdale, AZ, though they have locations elsewhere. For the add-on, you'll have to use the vocational flight training portion of the GIB, which, in the 9/11 version, caps at $10k a year. That goes FAST in helo training. I've flown 4 times and my bill is already $4k or so, but that includes ground training. Hope this helps.
 
Title says it all. Trying to line up a job in the next 2 years, but they require both a CMEL and Commercial Rotor. If I have Uncle Sam paying for it via the GI Bill, does anyone have a recommendation for an accelerated commercial helo add-on? (Hopefully 2-3 weeks max.)

I have 0 rotor time.

Bristow Academy would be a great option. They have excellent equipment and have been training helo pilots for a long time! But like what fez said money will disappear fast flying helos! I've spent about $100k flying helicopters in past 10 years but most of that was flying for fun in a family owned helicopter that I paid the expenses to fly. I also had money back then too haha :D
 
Phoenix area has several schools. I visited heli-expo in Vegas this week; lots of schools looking for new commercial - rotor rated pilots to complete CFI; then stay and teach. A panel of experts downplayed the college programs and supported getting the CFI + instruct or sight seeing until 1000 hours. Gold Coast out of Glendale, AZ has a good price for the add-on commercial.
 
.............For the add-on, you'll have to use the vocational flight training portion of the GIB, which, in the 9/11 version, caps at $10k a year. That goes FAST in helo training. I've flown 4 times and my bill is already $4k or so, but that includes ground training. Hope this helps.

I spent right around $10,000 for my Comm Helo add-on about 15 years ago (approx 60 hours in an R22, IIRC) ........ I am guessing it has got to be quite a bit more money now. I spent virtually zero $$$ on ground training - I figured I can "read the book" (and did so, actually, read several of them) - and would guess most other Comm or ATP rated F/W pilots with average intelligence can do the same. There's no written exam for the Comm Helo add-on, so I think that the only "Ground Training" one should need is a few minutes, every now and then, to ask questions of your Instructor for the stuff you are confused about; and maybe a couple of hours of Ground Training for prep for the Oral portion of the Flight Test. I think a lot of these schools really run a scam on students with the amount of "Ground Training" they "require", or try to get you to take.
 
Where are you located? I'm currently doing my CFI upgrade at Universal Helicopters in Scottsdale, AZ, though they have locations elsewhere. For the add-on, you'll have to use the vocational flight training portion of the GIB, which, in the 9/11 version, caps at $10k a year. That goes FAST in helo training. I've flown 4 times and my bill is already $4k or so, but that includes ground training. Hope this helps.

Yikes! No chance the AF would have sent you to the IP course I'm guessing?
 
Yikes! No chance the AF would have sent you to the IP course I'm guessing?

IP course? Me? That'll never happen. I'm just a TR so the chances of them dropping the coin to send me to IP school, which I won't even be eligible to attend for another 4 years or so, are pretty much nil.

It's all good though. I'm learning a lot on the civilian side that I wouldn't have otherwise. Can't fly in the military forever!
 
IP course? Me? That'll never happen. I'm just a TR so the chances of them dropping the coin to send me to IP school, which I won't even be eligible to attend for another 4 years or so, are pretty much nil.

It's all good though. I'm learning a lot on the civilian side that I wouldn't have otherwise. Can't fly in the military forever!

TR?
 

Traditional Reservist. In the Guard we just called them "weekenders" but the AFRC side likes to call them TR's.

BTW, I'm still just a co-pilot, so I still have Aircraft Commander, and Flight Lead upgrades to complete before I'm even considered for IP school.
 
Traditional Reservist. In the Guard we just called them "weekenders" but the AFRC side likes to call them TR's.

BTW, I'm still just a co-pilot, so I still have Aircraft Commander, and Flight Lead upgrades to complete before I'm even considered for IP school.

Ah, gotchya. Here we call them m-days or just part timers.

How long does it usually take you guys to make AC? Here it ranges widely. We made one guy a PC at 400 hours - but he was pretty good. Average is around 600 or so and plenty are 800-900.
 
Did you find a solution. I am under the impression that our VA benefits require our coursework be done in a school that is part of a college in order to get the 100% comp. and typically that means pairing it with a quarterly/semester based curriculum.
 
Yeah, $10,000 a year won't even get you your private pilot license anymore. You'd be looking at a very long and painful process to earn ratings. You'd run out of benefit time before you run out of money, simply because you'd fly for a month and a half and then be done for the year.

Best bet, find a program with a public community college attached to it. Enroll in the A.A or A.S program for the flight dept. and get unlimited flight funding for your training. You'll finish in 2 years, or less, with all your ratings and an associates degree that most school probably offer a "transfer" version of so you can take it to a 4-year undergrad program.
 
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