Archive for the ‘60-Day PPL’ Category

Days 18, 19, 20, 21

Friday, July 27th, 2007

I’ve slacked off on writing just because I have been so busy. I get home at the end of the day and I am a total zombie. So even if I had a bit of energy to fire up my laptop my posts wouldn’t be coherent.

Days 18, 19, 20, 21

Nothing tremendous to report here. Just more pattern work and flying maneuvers. When I’m not flying I am trying to study for the oral exam.

Days 16 & 17

Thursday, July 19th, 2007

Day 16:

 It’s hard to believe the program is a quarter of the way over.  We went up this morning and flew out to the southeast practice area.  Once we arrived I started polishing up my maneuvers.  The are coming along pretty well except I’m a bit timid when it comes to stalling the airplane.  My emergency descents are fine as are my steep turns.  I need to memorize my checklists which isn’t that hard. 

Day 17:

Today was my second day flying out at 5am.  Which means I am up at 345am to be at the airport by 445am.  Needless to say I am pretty beat.  But it is better than sleeping in and flying during the heat.  Plus I feel more productive when I leave the airport at 745am and I’ve accomplished a bunch so early in the day. 

We remained in the pattern today choosing to polish up my landings.  I also had not practiced a go around or crabbing on final so we worked on those as well.  The go around was pretty self explanatory, but crabbing will take some more practice.  I failed to understand that I was supposed to crab and remain on the centerline so I ended up drifting over to 12C from 12R.  I got back on track and put it down quite nicely.  My landings are beginning to look pretty good.  Every once and a while I dent the runway a bit.  Working in-range radio and gate manager for Mesa has helped my radio work since I can listen and reply with ease.  I fumbled the first few times but I have it down now. 

Afterwards I took my PTS and Oral Exam guide to the gym and studied while I used the eliptical machine.  I am flying at 630am tomorrow so I’m off to hit the books and sleep for a bit. 

Day 14 and 15

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

I did not fly yesterday (Monday) so I spent most of the day at the airport studying the Practical Test Standards book.  I have basically been going through it and reading the associated FARs.  I got home early which allowed me to meet up with my friend at the US Airways Flight Center.  We watched British takeoff and then my roommate and I raced home to beat the duststorm

Today was my first experience with a broken airplane.  I found a missing bolt while preflighting.  We switched to another one only to fill the tanks and find a fuel leak.  My instructor removed a bolt from the leaky airplane, put it on the original one and off we went.  While we waited to sort things out I took some pictures of the amazing sunrise.

Days 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

I’m really starting to enjoy this whole experience.  I seem to have a flow going especially now that the written is over.  I can focus on absorbing all of this information and getting ready for the checkride. 

I flew every day this week as well has ground school Monday through Friday.  My instructor had to take the weekend off so I went up with another one.  He was pretty cool to fly with.  On Day 12 (Saturday) we flew a little farther south towards Pinal and Marana; discussed what we wanted to do with our careers, etc.  Before I knew it, we had flown for almost 2 hours.  I drove home took a nap and enjoyed the day. 

As I was driving to the airport on Sunday my instructor called me to say he couldn’t fly.  So I went for a little mini-roadtrip around the valley and enjoyed my day off.  It was nice to not fly for a day.  As much as I love it, it’s nice to just have a day to let it all set in.

Days 5, 6, and 7 incl. Private written

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Not much to report for these 3 days so I will merge them into one.

I flew every day though no ground school on the weekend.  I spent much of Saturday studying and then met up with my family for dinner.  Sunday was a crappy day.  I thought I could take the written exam at 10am.  But unfortunetly you cannot take an exam while others are studying for theirs.  So we all needed to wait for two guys to take their ATP written before we could start the test.  At 715pm I was on my way out the door.  But I passed and that’s all that counts.

Day 4 - Listen to your intuition.

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Day 4:

I was still awake at 1am so I decided it would be a great idea to just stay up until I needed to jump in the shower at 345am.  The plan was to go to the airport, fly, and come home and sleep for a bit then head back for ground school.  I grabbed a Dr. Pepper and a Snickers bar and went out to preflight.   Something told me that wasn’t a great idea but I needed to stay awake. 

Our lesson today was steep turns and power on/off stalls.  I was a bit nervous about stalling the airplane (see where I’m going with this?) but now have an understanding as to how it works and how to prevent them.

Once I turned onto final it became quite clear that Dr. Pepper and Snickers aren’t a good combo when you haven’t slept in 36 hours.  Needless to say we taxiied in with urgency and I made a pit stop at home. 

Later that day I went out and purchased the ASA Prepware CDROM for the Private Written.  I recommend it to anyone who is studying for the written exam.  My parents are intown this week so it’s been tough trying to balance school, family time and study for the written.  Flew again today but no ground school since it was Saturday. 

Day 3 - First Flight

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

I finally got to meet my instructor today.  She seems great.  We met at about 645am so it would not be too hot and flew out over Johnson’s Ranch into the Southeast practice area.  I was able to practice some basic stuff like straight and level flight and turns.  It was more of a discovery flight than anything else.  The 172 is the smallest airplane I have ever flown in so I imagine that will take some getting used to. 

I grabbed some grub and went over to ground school which is held in the building across the street from the ramp.

Day 2 - More Ground School

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

The entire day was spent in Ground school.  Watching Jepp DVDs and stopping to explain certain topics.  Nothing much to report here.  It was pretty boring to watch the DVDs but it explains things better than the book.

Day 1 - Orientation

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Nothing to big to report on Day 1.  I arrived at 745am for the first day which was scheduled to being at 800am.  We spent most of the morning filling out tons of paperwork.  We drove up to the apartments which are fairly close to the airport.  It’s a really nice complex with a pool and volleyball courts.  I am not living in the apartments for the Private portion however I am giving some thought to living there during the ACPP.

 We broke for lunch and went back to start ground school.  The two instructors teaching ground school are brand new to ATP but seem to know what they are doing. 

Intro

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Hello and thanks for stopping by.  My goal is to shed a bit of insight into ATP’s 60-Day Private Pilot and 90-Day Airline Career Pilot programs and help those considering them make the right decision. 

I will tell you a bit about myself so you all know where I am coming from.  After a 2 year hiatus living in my native New Jersey, I decided to come back to Arizona.  I spent the first few weeks bumming around not knowing what I wanted to do careerwise.  Luckily I had an intervention of sorts from a few friends who are just a big airplane dorks as I am.  They made me realize that going back to a job I hated just because it paid well was settling and not pursuing what I loved. 

I researched a ton of flight schools.  From mom and pop FBOs to large flight acadamies.  I visited ATP’s Phoenix center and knew I found the spot.  I was attracted by the guaranteed cost and the fast-track program.  There wasn’t a tremendous cost difference between ATP and the FBOs I considered.  And since I am flying full-time I can’t get distracted by my paycheck while I am working and flying at the same time.  My goal is to instruct while I wait for a spot at one of the regional carriers I am considering.Â