Instrument Rating

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Price: Negotiable
Delivery Date: Within 3 days after your order is confirmed.
Place Of Origin USA
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  • Description
  • In very simple terms, the instrument rating allows pilots to safely fly in and through clouds. This can be extremely helpful to being able to complete a flight safely and efficiently. Even if you don’t anticipate conducting flights in ‘bad weather’, the instrument rating is a wonderful tool for cross country flying within the airway system. Instrument Rated pilots are safer, more precise in their flying and adherence to procedures and statistically less likely to be involved in an aviation accident.

    Requirements for an instrument rating:

    Hold at least a private pilot certificate.

    Be able to read, write, and converse fluently in English.

    Hold a current FAA medical certificate.

    Receive and log ground training from an authorized instructor or complete a home-study course, Other excellent resources for your instrument training will include: the invaluable Jeppesen Instrument/Commercial Manual, the FAA’s Instrument Procedures Handbook and Instrument Flying Handbook

    Subjects include:

    FARs

    IFR-related items in the AIM

    ATC system and procedures

    IFR navigation

    Use of IFR charts

    Aviation weather

    Operating under IFR

    Recognition of critical weather

    Aeronautical Decision Making (ADM)

    Crew Resource Management (CRM)

    Pass the FAA instrument rating knowledge test with a score of 70% or better.

    Accumulate flight experience (FAR 61.65):

    50 hrs of cross-country flight time as pilot in command, of which at least 10 hrs must be in airplanes:

    The 50 hrs includes solo cross-country time as a student pilot, which is logged as pilot-in-command time.

    Each cross-country must have a landing at an airport that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 NM from the original departure point.

    A total of 40 hrs of actual or simulated instrument time in the areas of operation listed in 7. below, including:

    15 hrs of instrument flight training from a CFII (CFII is an instructor who is authorized to give instrument instruction) in the aircraft category for which the instrument rating is sought.

    at least 3 hrs from an authorized instructor in preparation for the practical test within the 60 days preceding the test.

    Cross-country flight procedures that include at least one cross-country flight in an airplane that is performed under IFR and consists of:

    A distance of at least 250 NM along airways or ATC-directed routing

    An instrument approach at each airport

    Three different kinds of approaches with the use of navigation systems

    Demonstrate flight proficiency (FAR 61.65). You must receive and log training, as well as obtain a logbook sign-off (endorsement) from your CFII on the following areas of operation:

    Preflight preparation

    Preflight procedures

    Air traffic control clearances and procedures

    Flight by reference to instruments

    Navigation systems

    Instrument approach procedures

    Emergency operations

    Post flight procedures

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