and somewhat intimidating to have someone like that as your first student.
My first "student" was an F-18 pilot with 5000 hours and over 400 carrier landings. Needless to say, he hadnt flown a piston twin before and it was a challenge to teach him how to land the thing! Great pilot though... and somewhat intimidating to have someone like that as your first student. Of course I didnt mention my experience at the time (300 hours)
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*sigh* That was the only flight I've ever discontinued because a student made me feel unsafe.
If I could just add something else to the "make mistakes to learn" thing. I actually got yelled at on another forum for letting my student make mistakes. This gentleman claimed that the student was never going to learn if I kept on letting him make mistakes. He continued on to say that that's why the instructor is there, to help him learn without making mistakes and that if the student wanted to make mistakes, he could just go out and fly by himself.
Needless to say I disagreed with this guy big-time. I was surprised to hear that come out of a CFI...
Greg
My first "student" was an F-18 pilot with 5000 hours and over 400 carrier landings. Needless to say, he hadnt flown a piston twin before and it was a challenge to teach him how to land the thing! Great pilot though... and somewhat intimidating to have someone like that as your first student. Of course I didnt mention my experience at the time (300 hours)
Heck I always figured the point of having an instructor on board was to make sure the plane got back to the airport in the same condition it was when it departed.
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I nonchalantly mutter "my controls."
CFI'ing is so much fun!
One of my first flights was a checkout in a 172 for an army pilot. We did a few touch and goes and I mentioned to him to lower the noise a little after the initial climb so you can see over it for traffic.
The guy did really good on all the landings and in the pattern. So he drops me off at the terminal and I watch him take off with an extremely shallow climb.
My heart stopped for a second because I didn't think he was going to clear the trees.
Lesson learned: be very specific and show them a good example of what your talking about. I didn't do that this time cause the guy had XXXX hours flying in the army and thought that he would get what I was saying based off his experiences as a pilot
get used to this ---> :banghead:
Whats the problem? It's called terrain masking. He's Army...anything above 100 AGL is nosebleed altitudes!![]()
Shallow = good = airspeed first (not =) stall spin crash burn after powerplant failure in heavier single.
That's my logic anyway.