I always took mine near the end so I had a better understanding of the questions because I've actually flown and trained.
Hey all. when is the best time to take the written exam during training? Should I take it before starting training or right near the end before the checkride?
I need advice!![]()
I did mine when I only had maybe 10 hours or so. I had done no XC planning or used a flight computer. You do not have to have an understanding of the questions to answer them. The ones I didn't understand (mainly VORs at the time) I just memorized the answers. I passed with an 89. I probably would have gotten higher if I had taken it at the end, but still well within the pass range.One guy who only had 5 hours toward his private license and a Gleim signoff tried taking it and failed, he had never even seen a flight computer/plotter and had never done cross country flight planning. No reason in rushing it, take it when you are ready, but preferably not the night before your checkride.
Pfffft.....
Memorize those answers and get it outta the way!
Same here. I'm actually gonna take the Instrument Airplane written sometime this week and hopefully a checkride by the middle or end of Feb.
agreedTake the FII at the same time. Pretty much the same test.
:yeahthat: As an instructor one of the most frustrating things was having students not be able to take their check ride because they hadn't taken the written yet. As soon as you start flying cross countries talk to your instructor and go take it. That will allow you to get it out of the way and still have plenty of time to study for the checkride.One guy who only had 5 hours toward his private license and a Gleim signoff tried taking it and failed, he had never even seen a flight computer/plotter and had never done cross country flight planning. No reason in rushing it, take it when you are ready, but preferably not the night before your checkride.
Take the FII at the same time. Pretty much the same test.
I see no problem with memorizing some questions you just don't understand yet. Try to learn it, but if you can't on your own memorize and worry about learning it later with an instructor. You will have to really learn it at some point, but it doesn't necessarily have to be before the written.I might be against the crowd here but this is what I'll tell you:
Study study study, but for God's sake DO NOT memorize the questions/answers. Take a practice exam maybe once a week or every 2 weeks and when you hit 80-85 two times in a row, go for it.
I honestly cannot emphasize DO NOT memorize. I say that for your own good. Studying for the test really helps clean up anything your CFI might forget or breeze through and it'll make all your checkrides a breeze, I promise you that.
I honestly cannot emphasize DO NOT memorize. I say that for your own good. Studying for the test really helps clean up anything your CFI might forget or breeze through and it'll make all your checkrides a breeze, I promise you that.
yes but at the same time, say your cfi is terrible (But since you're a primary student you likely don't know this) and forget to teach you VORs or NDBs (NDBs is acceptable VORs absolutely not, or doesn't teach your correctly.I see no problem with memorizing some questions you just don't understand yet. Try to learn it, but if you can't on your own memorize and worry about learning it later with an instructor. You will have to really learn it at some point, but it doesn't necessarily have to be before the written.