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Flight Training

Is It “Dangerous” To Worry About Your First Solo Flight?

I recently had a little exchange with with a well known aviation youtuber. In one of his videos, he said that, on average, his students go solo at around 20-25hrs. What?!

I commented that I knew people who were ready to solo at around 13-16 hours, in the UK, and asked if there is a different system in his country. His response was that it is “dangerous” to compare hours to solo and that he would prefer to share the skies with someone who had more hours. #Shade!

In case it needs to be said, I actually like his videos. They are great quality and they’ve helped me a lot. So, this blog is not about putting him down, it’s more about considering and criticising his comments.

#SoloBy30

I’m the perfect example of the kind of student who was ‘worried’ about his first solo. A couple months ago, I set a goal to solo before my 30th birthday. As a result, I started a Go Fund Me campaign and was able to raise ยฃ1180.72 towards it.

I’m pleased to announce that, although I didn’t solo before my 30th birthday, I did solo on my birthday week. It was an incredible experience! For more on that, subscribe to my YouTube channel. The video will be out on 17th July 2021.

What is George Saying?

For the purposes of this blog, I’m going to refer to the youtuber as George (hopefully there isn’t a prominent aviation youtuber called George lol).

I was taught that a good way to think something through is to outline as strong an argument as possible for the opposing viewpoint. So, I’m going to steelman George’s argument to see whether I have any counter-arguments left.

George was making the point that it is dangerous to compare the hours by which you solo, because it can be unnecessarily discouraging to those who take longer to solo. Some students may be so down on themselves, so much so, that they quit flight training altogether.

Alternatively, students worrying about their solos may put undue pressure on their flight instructor to let them solo, before they are ready. As a result, something may happen during their first solo, for which they are unprepared, causing them to crash and die. That would be tragic and is worth preventing!

We are all different and we learn at different speeds. We all bring different skills and qualities into flight training. Consequently, everyone’s progress through flight training will look different.

Every student should simply take every lesson as it comes, trusting that their qualified flight instructor is skilled and knowledgeable enough to know when they are ready for their first solo.

In addition, even if it were to take the student more hours to solo, at least they would have more experience and therefore, they would, more likely, be a safer pilot.

Why I Still Completely Disagree

Firstly, does more flying hours automatically equate to a higher level of proficiency? Not necessarily.

Secondly, the fact that George decided to mention that students solo at around 20-25 hours opens it up to comparison. If he did not want people to compare hours, he shouldn’t have contributed to what he sees as a ‘problem’, by offering up that statistic. He should have just said, “students solo when they are ready”. Simples. No? ๐Ÿคท๐Ÿฟโ€โ™‚๏ธ

Thirdly, no student can solo before their instructor allows them to. It is the job of the flight instructor to make sure that the student is adequately skilled and in the right frame of mind to fly solo, as ‘pilot in command’.

If the flight instructor doesn’t have the testicular fortitude to say “not yet” to a student who isn’t ready, perhaps they should consider a different line of work. As such, how the flight instructor responds is far more important than what the student thinks or feels.

Fourthly, people like me, who are determined to realise their dream of becoming a pilot despite very limited financial resources, have to be incredibly efficient. Being efficient doesn’t mean cutting corners. It means that I want to learn all the skills I need to learn to be a pilot, as well as I can, and as quickly as I can, thereby, spending as little money as possible.

If I had all the money in the world, I’d be happy to never think or “worry” about my solo. That way, George could simply continue to cash-in on my lessons through instructor fees, as well as monetising the videos on Patreon and Youtube. ๐Ÿ™„ tut tut!

Last, and by no means least, George’s argument, has no consideration for the positive side of comparison. There is such a thing as “healthy competition”. It has driven much of our advancement and achievement as human beings.

I felt rather strongly about going solo as quickly as possible. That meant I turned up well read, on the theoretical aspect of the lesson, to the point that I could have briefed my instructor on most days (instead of the other way around).

That same desire led me to practise each manoeuvre, over and over, on my flight simulator, in the lead up to each lesson, until I grew comfortable with it.

I watched YouTube videos to learn as much as I could, vicariously. I looked like an idiot in public, armchair flying whenever I could, ahead of my lessons. I reviewed video footage from all my lessons and kept a diary of what I needed to improve and how I could improve on it.

I turned up to lessons with equipment that my instructors never even told me that I needed. How did I know I needed it? Because my desire to solo as quickly as possible made me take responsibility for my progress, which led me to research more broadly and accept advice from other pilots and flight instructors.

When I messed up my circuits, due to being unprepared for the opposite runway, I sentenced myself to doing 100 circuits on the flight sim. That virtually took all day. 100 x a 5-minute circuits = 8 hrs+, as a conservative estimate. Believe me when I tell you, I was ready for any runway by the time my next lesson came about.

In Conclusion

I have to admit, the more I think through it, the more George’s statement seems somewhat ignorant and, at the very least, doesn’t apply to someone like me.

For now, I’m glad that I “worried” about getting my solo done. That itchiness to solo gave me the motivation to plan ahead and work as hard I possibly could, to make it happen.

As George said, in his response to me, the norm is to solo “when you are ready”. Well, I was ready at just under 14 hours of flying lessons (+ 3 trial flights) and I’m damn well proud of that!

I actually asked George, in my comment, if there was a difference of approaches where he instructs. I just couldn’t understand what he does with his students for the additional 17 hours it took them to solo, in some cases.

I was hoping he would outline his approach in a way that was more useful. If he does something my instructor hasn’t done with me, I’d want to know. Afterall, it is my aim to be the best pilot I can possibly be, irrespective of how many hours I have in the logbook.

Regardless, George is a great youtuber. From the little I’ve seen, I’ve always thought he is a great instructor, and everyone I’ve ever spoken to about him thought so too.

Who knows?! Maybe one day I’ll meet him and we’ll hash it out, if it is still relevant and useful to do so. Anyways, a lot has been said. Now, I retreat, to reflect.

What do you think? I’m genuinely curious. In particular, I would like to learn of counterarguments I haven’t considered as yet. Please drop your thoughts in the comments section below.

After all, it is when we are wrong – when we fail – that we truly learn the most. Failures reveal what we haven’t yet learned. Learning makes progress possible. Progress is the best any of us can hope for. Speak your mind!

For more on how I’m getting on with learning to fly, check me out on the YouTube.๐Ÿ‘Š๐Ÿพ

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Categories
Flight Training My Journey

Solo Flight, Here I Come!

One of the biggest lessons I’ve learnt over the last year is that when you set off on a journey, to achieving an important goal, you will likely have problems you didn’t foresee.

However, even more importantly, there are incredibly useful solutions that will reveal themselves, but only once you have embarked on and committed yourself to the journey. At least, that seems to be the case for me.

At the end of the 2020, I had a chat with one of my accountability partners and told him that my big goal was to solo for my birthday. I had no clue how it would happen, except that I’d try to make it happen.

A few months later, after one of my flying lessons, my car broke down as I pulled away, in slow-moving traffic. Thankfully, this didn’t happen when I was doing 80mph *cough* *cough* I mean 70mph on the M11 motorway (highway).

The mechanics listened to the clanging and banging in the engine and said it wouldn’t be worth fixing. They gave me a quote for a replacement engine, ยฃ1,800. I was devasted. I knew this would have a huge impact on my flying.

I was really tempted to put flight training on hold, to pay for my car’s heart transplant. After all, I rely on it for so much more than just transport (particularly when out of lockdowns). As soon as I decided to put flight training on hold, I recognised in myself the same ‘impulse to pause’ that had crippled many people’s path to progress.

A fear grew within. I realised that if I gave myself an excuse to pause flight training, I might always find an excuse to pause it, which means I may never achieve my dream-goal. There was no way I would allow myself to go down that path.

In the end, I decided to take the car off the road for a few months while I saved up and continued with my monthly flying lessons. With my financial priorities split, having my first solo flight before my 30th Birthday seemed impossible.

Here’s what’s crazy though. Out of curiosity, I asked my flying instructor how far I was my first solo flight. He said, he estimated that I would need another 10 hours. 10 hours? That works out to be ยฃ1,800 exactly. Remember that figure from anywhere?  Coincidence?

I remember a while back, one of my friends advised me to start a crowdfunding campaign. Now seemed as good a time as any, so I launched a Go Fund Me campaign, #SoloBy30.

I’ve been overwhelmed by the kindness and generosity that I’ve been shown, through financial gifts, as well as words of encouragement. I know that each and every penny gifted to me was hard-earned, and there are many, and arguably better ways that money might have been spent, but those people chose to support me on my journey. I’m humbled and very grateful. Thank you.

If, this time last year, you told me that I’d be preparing for my first solo flight for my 30th Birthday, I’d have bitten you arm off. And yet, here I am, but I’m not sure exactly how it’s all happened. Of course, I’m still a long way from my Private Pilot’s License, but it’s progress, and that’s all one can hope for.

With just over 4 weeks to go, everything seems to be coming together so well. I passed my Air Law exam last year. I’m in the process of sorting out my medical certificate and all the financial gifts I have received have given me a much needed boost to make it all happen.

Solo flight, here I come!

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Categories
Uncategorized

Go Fund Me: Future Pilot #SoloBy30

I can’t believe I’ll be turning 30 soon! I’m nearly a dinosaur, but I feel young (when I’m not tearing my quads from playing football without warming up). As they say, “you are as old as you feel”… Am I being a bit over-dramatic? Likely!

After debating it for sometime, I have decided to launch a ‘Go Fund Me’ campaign, in celebration of my 3 decades on the planet. I look forward to sharing more updates with you over the coming weeks.

IN BRIEF

Last year, I made the bold and probably crazy idea to start living in my car to put the extra cash towards achieving my childhood dream of becoming a pilot. Despite all the concerns, I knew this was the only way to truly kickstart my journey towards my dream.

The commitment and sacrifice I have made since last year has allowed me to make amazing progress towards my dream.  However, with only a teaching assistant’s salary and an hourly training cost of ยฃ180 (travel and equipment not included), progress has been slower than ideal.

This year, it is my goal to have my first solo flight by my 30th birthday, on 8th June 2021. This means, my instructor will allow me to fly the airplane alone, while he supervises from the ground. It’s one the most exciting phases of training – like a child taking its first steps!

I am only 10 Flying hours away from my first solo. Your financial gift will help make my dream come true, on one of the most significant years of my life.

THE BREAKDOWN
10 Flying Hours : ยฃ1,800
Class 2 Medical :  ยฃ200
Total                            ยฃ2,000

DEADLINE: 1st June 2021

I’ve been sharing my journey on YouTube, so you will be able to share in this exciting experience with me, seeing first-hand the life-changing impact of your financial gift of any amount.

Seriously, every little helps. If you can’t give, please do share my campaign with someone who might. Thank you in advance!

๐Ÿ‘‰๐ŸพGo Fund Me Campaign ๐Ÿ‘ˆ๐Ÿพ

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MY PROGRESS SO FAR

The last year brought many milestones. I had my first official flying lesson, I performed my first take off and landing as well as achieving a first time pass in 3 exams. I have 6 left to complete, before qualifying for a Private Pilot’s License. This, in itself, is waaay more progress than all the previous years put together!

In addition to that, I got myself a new laptop and basic flight simulator equipment. This would allow me to practice and maintain my skill in between lessons (useful during lockdowns!). Using the flight sim also means that I spend less time being bamboozled in the cockpit and more time refining what I already practised.

My GoPro and action cameras, bought over the last year, have allowed me to review and milk each flying lesson. In turn, this allows to make the most amount of progress possible. It also means that I can post on instagram and YouTube, where you can follow my adventure. 

What’s Next?

After my first solo flight, I will have around 30 more hours to complete before becoming eligible for a Private Pilot’s License.

Eventually, I hope to become a commercial pilot and work as a flying instructor, combining my passion for aviation wit my passion for teaching. For now that’s a long ways off. I would settle for a solo flight by the 8th of June. That’s what I will be preparing for.

In the distant (but not too distant) future, once I have my licenses, I hope to do outreach work to young people who may find themselves in disadvantaged positions. I hope that my story will encourage and inspire them to go after their dreams, early on, despite how impossible it might seem.

A statement in the book, ‘Key Person of Influence’, has stuck with me since the day I read. The author said, “Choose a game you are willing to play, win or lose”. Flying training, this is the game I have decided to play, win or lose. I hope that you will help me win. 

Your financial gift, of any amount, will go a long way in helping me realise my dream. I hope that you will support me on my journey. I look forward to giving you updates each step of the journey. 

Seriously, every little helps. If you can’t give, please do share my campaign with someone who might. Thank you in advance!

DEADLINE: 1st June 2021

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