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Question about ratings...

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VW Pilot

MMM...PIGEON CASSEROLE
Joined
Jun 3, 2006
Posts
257
g,day airmen...

I have a question...We all know that to get a commercial
certificate, you must obtain 250 hrs of flight time...But my question is
Between the Instument rating and commercial, what ratings can you add?

I'd really don't want to just burn holes in the sky between instrument and commercial doing x-country...I'd rather build some ratings in between? Is this
Possible? If so, which ones?? Thanx.
 
Consider a tailwheel A/C endorsement in your logbook. Don"t consider an operation that doesn't let you solo the airplane after the check-out though.

You will be amazed at what your previous flight school didn't teach you.

Another possibility is a glider rating. Flying sailplanes while learning to soar will greatly enhance your basic airmanship.
 
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Try renting different planes while building your time towards 250. This will prove invaluable. You could also get a high performance or complex endorsement too.
 
I am in the same boat, not much liking the idea of flying one aircraft for the remainder of my commercial requirements. Added my tailwheel in a T-craft, HP/Complex in a Comanche 250, and the other day I sat in an MD87 and made airplane noises.

I also am interested in the glider rating, especially as a relatively inexpensive way to build time -- I took a few sailplane lessons about 5 years ago and loved every second of it. I looked around on ssa.org and found a few operations in OR, nothing closer than 100+ miles. Looks like there's an active club @ KSIY, which is closer, but they don't appear to offer instruction. Any recommendations?
 
I would recommend working on your CFI knowledge and skill as you work on your commercial rating. That way you can take your commercial checkride at 250 hours and your CFI at 251.
 
Add to that-start flying right seat as well so you get used to it early on if your plan is to go for CFI next.
 
You could also log some SIC time as a safety pilot which would count towards your TT and cost you nothing. It'll get you more accustomed to instrument flight too.
 
You could also log some SIC time as a safety pilot which would count towards your TT and cost you nothing. It'll get you more accustomed to instrument flight too.


when acting as a safety pilot arent you logging PIC time? also you could ferry aircraft (for free of course).
 

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