Pilots Charter
Instrument Rating Bay Area
2016-11-04 13:28  Click:621
Price:¥0.00/people
Brand:Advantage Aviation - Palo Alto
起订:1people
Delivery Date:Within 5 days after your order is confirmed
Offer

Congratulations – you have earned your Private Pilot License, and have become proficient at flying VFR. The next logical step in your pilot training is an instrument rating. Not only does this refine your airplane handling skills far beyond those of a regular VFR pilot, gives you new skills and a new challenge, but it is also an incredibly useful addition to your license when flying for added flexibility – mornings are regularly socked in before 11am in the Bay Area, however an Instrument Rating will allow you to punch through the thin marine layer and be on your way. From a safety perspective, an Instrument Rating is invaluable and gives you the ability to either continue your journey or make a safe landing when conditions fall below VFR minimums. IFR does not mean bad-weather flying, it means safe flying.

Entitlements

With an instrument rating, you are able to:

Fly in instrument meteorological conditions

Fly in airspace above 18,000 MSL (Class A airspace)

Operate in under SVFR at night.

Requirements

In order to obtain an instrument rating, you will need:

Hold at least a Private Pilot License

50 Hours of logged Pilot in Command cross country

At least one cross country flight performed under IFR of at least 250NM, incorporating 3 kinds of instrument approaches

Minimum 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time (of which, 10 hours may be simulated)

Minimum 15 hours of instruction from a certified instrument flight instructor (CFII) – of which 3 hours much have been in the prior 2 months in an appropriate airplane

Successful completion of written knowledge test

Successful completion of oral examination and checkride

Contact information
Comment
0 Num