PanJet
Well-Known Member
Okay, I'm not a CFI (yet), so I hope you guys don't mind me posting in here because I have a question for all of you. I want to know what your opinion is on the requirements for IFR XC before getting the instrument rating. I honestly believe the requirements are lacking by only requiring one long IFR XC flight with an instructor.
I have talked to several pilots (a few now CFI's and II's) who have told me that they did not feel ready to fly actual instrument after getting their ratings because they felt like they didn't know the system well enough. I don't believe this has anything to do with a lack of teaching, just a lack of required experience. They said they could fly approaches all day no problem, but they weren't comfortable actually flying somewhere IFR. Personally, I felt pretty comfortable flying IFR after I got my rating because when I was building XC time as a private pilot, I flew several long XC flights with an IR buddy of mine who was building time as well, and he always filed IFR, even if the sky was severe clear. I learned so much from these few flights just by watching him and seeing how the system worked. I believe these few flights did wonders to help me with my understanding of the instrument flying system.
Recently I've flown with some private pilots who weren't all that far behind me in training as private pilots, but for some reason now have kind of stalled in their training for IR. It's not that they don't know how to do the procedures, but it's as if they're doing them because that's what the instructor told them to do, but they don't completely understand what they're doing and why. These pilots have not had the same opportunity to fly with IR pilots as much as I did, and I see a difference.
Kind of out of gratitude for what that buddy of mine did for me, I now look fondly on the opportunity to fly XC's with fresh private pilots at my school and file IFR even in dead clear so they can see how the system works. I like to do for them what worked for me, and I can see it working! Just a couple days ago I was flying with a buddy of mine who just got his private license and is now doing instrument training, and we went on a XC flight that was mostly VFR, but we ran into some IMC and rather than turning around or diverting I got a pop-up clearance and showed him how it was done. Then on the way back I filed and took him back into the IMC. He got to see quite a bit how the system worked that day (even though I'm not an instructor and he couldn't log the actual) and I could just see the wheels turning in his head as I pummeled through the charts and worked with ATC. He was even helping me with the charts with his limited experience from some ground school and instruction, but I could tell he was learning a lot. It was such a good feeling. It's also excellent experience for me because I'm learning how to explain and teach for when I train for CFI.
The IR should really include more XC requirements because during XC instrument flying is really where the system begins to make sense and people learn why, not just how.
I have talked to several pilots (a few now CFI's and II's) who have told me that they did not feel ready to fly actual instrument after getting their ratings because they felt like they didn't know the system well enough. I don't believe this has anything to do with a lack of teaching, just a lack of required experience. They said they could fly approaches all day no problem, but they weren't comfortable actually flying somewhere IFR. Personally, I felt pretty comfortable flying IFR after I got my rating because when I was building XC time as a private pilot, I flew several long XC flights with an IR buddy of mine who was building time as well, and he always filed IFR, even if the sky was severe clear. I learned so much from these few flights just by watching him and seeing how the system worked. I believe these few flights did wonders to help me with my understanding of the instrument flying system.
Recently I've flown with some private pilots who weren't all that far behind me in training as private pilots, but for some reason now have kind of stalled in their training for IR. It's not that they don't know how to do the procedures, but it's as if they're doing them because that's what the instructor told them to do, but they don't completely understand what they're doing and why. These pilots have not had the same opportunity to fly with IR pilots as much as I did, and I see a difference.
Kind of out of gratitude for what that buddy of mine did for me, I now look fondly on the opportunity to fly XC's with fresh private pilots at my school and file IFR even in dead clear so they can see how the system works. I like to do for them what worked for me, and I can see it working! Just a couple days ago I was flying with a buddy of mine who just got his private license and is now doing instrument training, and we went on a XC flight that was mostly VFR, but we ran into some IMC and rather than turning around or diverting I got a pop-up clearance and showed him how it was done. Then on the way back I filed and took him back into the IMC. He got to see quite a bit how the system worked that day (even though I'm not an instructor and he couldn't log the actual) and I could just see the wheels turning in his head as I pummeled through the charts and worked with ATC. He was even helping me with the charts with his limited experience from some ground school and instruction, but I could tell he was learning a lot. It was such a good feeling. It's also excellent experience for me because I'm learning how to explain and teach for when I train for CFI.
The IR should really include more XC requirements because during XC instrument flying is really where the system begins to make sense and people learn why, not just how.