flyboywbl
3rd regional in 1 year
Personally i hate 141. Our school went 141 this last summer. Hood time on the 3rd lesson?!?!?!? Ridiculous. I think I'm bitter because i had to transfer all my 61 students to 141. I'm still working out the kinks.
There is no "fun" flying in 141. Or is should say it does not count towards the 190 hours TT. I rented planes with other students and took cross countries all over. I flew to St. Paul, Oshkosh, Pheonix, along with some shorter flights that were not part of the 141 syllabus. Not only do you not need an instructor, you can split the rental cost with a friend and both log the hours if the pilot flying is under the hood.
I remember my commercial time building. Way WAY fun! i would just rent the plane for 4 hours every day and go fly at least 50 miles away to make it a cross country and then just putt around in the mountains looking for Elk and try to hit updrafts.
I know talking to my boss, he has a hard enough time hiring a 300 hour CFI let alone one who got their commercial in 190 hours. The only way he will hire a low time CFI is if he has trained them him self through our school. Case in point. We just hired a new CFI (albeit a Chief pilot). One applicant had over 1500 hours, the other had over 3000 hours. We hired the one with 3000 plus hours, airline experience, Charter experience, and who had worked at K-State for 12 years.
Lastly 190 tt does not include GROUND instruction witch is required. So what you can get your PPL in 35 hours you sill need 35 hours of ground to go with that! part 61 there is no required amount of ground training. Part 61 you can get your PPL in 40 and probably 10-15 hours of ground.
Money wise i think you'll spend close to the same. I think you will have more fun 61. It's more laid back. Some times i feel like 141 is a revolving door for a pilot farm. I think 61 training is less stressful because you don't have to get everything done for a specific flight lesson.
Good Luck!
-Matt
There is no "fun" flying in 141. Or is should say it does not count towards the 190 hours TT. I rented planes with other students and took cross countries all over. I flew to St. Paul, Oshkosh, Pheonix, along with some shorter flights that were not part of the 141 syllabus. Not only do you not need an instructor, you can split the rental cost with a friend and both log the hours if the pilot flying is under the hood.
I remember my commercial time building. Way WAY fun! i would just rent the plane for 4 hours every day and go fly at least 50 miles away to make it a cross country and then just putt around in the mountains looking for Elk and try to hit updrafts.
I know talking to my boss, he has a hard enough time hiring a 300 hour CFI let alone one who got their commercial in 190 hours. The only way he will hire a low time CFI is if he has trained them him self through our school. Case in point. We just hired a new CFI (albeit a Chief pilot). One applicant had over 1500 hours, the other had over 3000 hours. We hired the one with 3000 plus hours, airline experience, Charter experience, and who had worked at K-State for 12 years.
Lastly 190 tt does not include GROUND instruction witch is required. So what you can get your PPL in 35 hours you sill need 35 hours of ground to go with that! part 61 there is no required amount of ground training. Part 61 you can get your PPL in 40 and probably 10-15 hours of ground.
Money wise i think you'll spend close to the same. I think you will have more fun 61. It's more laid back. Some times i feel like 141 is a revolving door for a pilot farm. I think 61 training is less stressful because you don't have to get everything done for a specific flight lesson.
Good Luck!
-Matt