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If you're a non-instrument rated pilot, you have undoubtedly
experienced the frustration of canceling flights due to low
ceilings or poor visibility. Yet you know that just above
that shallow low overcast lie clear blue skies and great flying
weather!
All you need is your Instrument rating. With the skills
you'll develop in instrument training, you'll be able to control
your airplane and navigate all the way to your destination
without outside visual references, solely by reference to the
flight instruments. The Instrument rating will open up
many more opportunities for you to fly without being grounded by
weather. And in the process, you'll become a more accurate
and more proficient--and thus safer--pilot, even when the
weather is VFR.
Prerequisites
To take the FAA Instrument Airplane rating (Part 61)
practical test, you must:
- Be able to read, write and speak the English language.
- Complete the Computer-Based
Instruction course.
- Pass the FAA knowledge test before taking the practical test.
- Hold at least a Private Pilot certificate with Airplane
rating.
- Have at least 50 hours of pilot in command cross-country
flight time.
Training Time Required
To add the Instrument Airplane rating to your pilot certificate, the FAA requires:
- At least 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument flight
time, and
- At least 15 hours of dual instrument flight instruction
(although 30-40
hours are typically needed for safety and competency),
including:
- one dual IFR cross-country of at least 250 nm with different
instrument approaches at each of three airports, and
- 3 hours of instrument flight in preparation for the FAA
practical test.
Note that any actual or simulated instrument flight time that
you have logged before beginning your Instrument rating training
(such as the three hours of instrument flight time required for
the Private Pilot certificate) will count toward these
requirements.
Estimated Costs
Because different customers learn at different rates, it is
impossible to give a fixed cost for your Instrument rating.
The estimates below are based on the FAA
minimum flight times (assuming three hours of prior instrument
flight experience) and on the flight times logged by the
typical pilot in this course.
|
FAA
Minimums |
Typical
Pilot |
| Computer Based
Instruction Kit (includes CD-ROM course, textbook, IFR
flight organizer, course
syllabus, FAA
Instrument Airplane Practical
Test Standards, and carrying bag) |
$300 |
$300 |
| Cessna 172SP aircraft rental (at $115 per hour) |
$4,600 |
$5,750 |
| Flight instruction (at $35 per hour) |
$525 |
$1,400 |
|
FAA Knowledge Test fee (payable to testing center) |
$80 |
$80 |
|
FAA Practical Test fee (payable to examiner) |
$400 |
$400 |
| Total |
$5,905 |
$7,930 |
The Next Step
To begin your training toward your Instrument rating, contact
us to arrange the purchase of your CBI kit and to schedule your first
lesson.
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