fussle
Oh John...
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2003
- Posts
- 69
I just passed my CFI checkride at the FSDO today!! WOHOAA!! I appreciated everyone that shared their experiences on this board, and the advice they gave. So here is how my ride went. My oral was about 2-2.5 hours, and the flight portion was about 1.5 hours. The exam started at 8:30 in the morning. The first thing I had to do was prove that I was eligible to take the flight test (current flight review, endorsements, etc.). Then we went right into the FOI, and I was asked about the levels of learning, along with the teaching processes. After that we moved into the flight instructor's responsibilities (endorsements, regulations, etc.). In this part I was asked alot of questions in the scenario format. For instance, you have a student who did 6 landings well, but messed 2 of them up...are you going to endorse him for solo flight? Really not too bad. The main part of my oral was teaching about aerodynamics (four forces, lift, left turning tendencies, etc.), and flight maneuvers (chandelle, 8's on, s-turns) on the dry-erase board. I was also asked about the compass errors. I had to show him that the airplane was flight worthy (100 hour, etc.), and answer some basic airplane system questions. Really a straight forward oral. He was especially pleased that I made my own flight plans ahead of time. Also, he said from the very beginning there was no problem if I had to reference something. He said I could do it all I wanted. I just had to teach the material. Then we went out to fly, and I did a short field takeoff, short field landing, no flaps landing, and crosswind takeoff/landing. I then did slow flight and a power-off stalls. Next was steep turns, 8's on pylons, s-turns, and chandelles. I also had to teach straight-and-level flight. Then I put on the hood and we did basic flight on instruments, and recovery from unusual attitudes. Finally, we came in and he flew the airplane and landed while I taught. Really a nice guy, and fun to fly with. Offered a lot of new info; overall a fun checkride. The most important thing he said, and what he liked the most is that I continually talked, and explained the maneuver. He said he has had so many applicants who do not talk! Basically, what I did was treat him as a student the whole time. You tend to take things for granted, and not even think about teach straight-and-level flight because it seems so obvious and is so natural to you. But you must teach everything! Hope this helps someone out there, I know how stressful it can be getting the CFI.