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USA-trained(?) PPLs

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Old 10th Sep 1999, 16:21
  #1 (permalink)  
BEagle
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Angry USA-trained(?) PPLs

I've recently had the misfortune of doing conversion-onto-type training for a couple of so-called USA trained PPLs, 1 of whom purported to have done the JAR PPL(A). At the risk of being accused of xenophobic generalities, I have to say that, if these 2 (from different schools) are typical products of the cheap and nasty USA training schools, then, despite the squeals of outrage from Ailing Bob, the CAA should insist on a total stop to USA-based training for ANY parts of JAR licences. The standard of piloting skill varied from bad to appalling; neither 'pilot' had ever heard of selecting, holding and trimming attitudes - and when I asked them how they were taught to correct errors on the approach, I was faced with blank looks. Yes, PPL training in this country is more expensive - but at least UK-trained pilots seem to be taught proper handling skills!! The leaden hand of Eurocracy must be moderated to ensure that we give new pilots their core competence in Europe and not at the hands of some so-called flight school in the land of Uncle Spam!!
(Excuse me - just off to the nuclear bunker!)
 
Old 10th Sep 1999, 21:59
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JJflyer
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Angry

Really pisses me off to read crap like this...
So what BEagle is saying is that I actually have no idea what flying in Europe is all about as I am US trained and I really don't know how to fly at all...
Well Excuse me sir, but I have flown all over the world and without a problem. Does that mean that I was lucky ?
Or did I know what I was doing?
Don't go around generalising and judging all US trained pilots or the whole training industry after evaluating ONLY 2 PPL:s.
Have you ever even flown in US ?
Well try this for fun. Do your first solo from OAK international airport in the San Fransisco bay area with 10h where you have 15 airports witin 15nm radius...Would like to see you do that with your current experience.

Oh... and I was trained in EU before I left for US.

JJ



[This message has been edited by JJflyer (edited 10 September 1999).]
 
Old 10th Sep 1999, 22:23
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Capt.Weasel
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Beagle, you'd be lost and helpless .... OAK within the San Francisco class B is busier than whole EU ... I got trained there, and I passed my european commercial checkride, and the ATPL without any troubles. Maybe you should think before you write things like that, although I have to agree, that there are huge differences between schools in the middle of nowhere and places like SFO, or Flight Safety.

Happy landings ...

The Weasel

[This message has been edited by Capt.Weasel (edited 10 September 1999).]
 
Old 10th Sep 1999, 23:05
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BEagle
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Well, actually, yes. In 8000 hours of flying over the last 23 years I've done a fair bit of flying in the US - from 80 KIAS at 1000ft to M0.92 at 51000ft - and it's very, very, easy because of the level of spoon-feeding involved. But please note the difference between your own pure handling skills and the quality of instruction you were given. The 2 PPLs I flew with seem to have achieved their apallingly minimal prowess by virtually teaching themselves rather than by benefiting from a properly structured training programme. It was once described to me that the teaching in Spam-land is to do exercises 1-13 13 times rather than sequentially. And don't think that the level of yack on the radio is indicative of 'difficult' flying conditions - it just means that you get told what to do rather than learning to think for yourself! And that includes those pathetic folk who waffle up and down the East coast of Florida in desperately clapped-out C152s (oh yes they damn well are!!) thinking that fly North-keep the coast on the left, wait 1 1/2 hours, fly a 30 deg banked turn to the right (watch the G girls), fly South-keep the coast on the right, wait another 1 1/2 hours then land is a sound way of developing airmanship (probably a term never heard of in Spam-schools).
(Back into the bunker!!)
 
Old 10th Sep 1999, 23:41
  #5 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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I hesitate to enter this one but I shall simply relate my experience.

I have now had two students who (separately) started in the USA at schools I had not heard of. Having completed around 30hrs each (roughly) they returned to blighty for one reason or another.

Both were terrible considering the hours they had done. The real basics of lookout scans, coordination and flying by reference to attitude were absent. What was present was a very relaxed attitude to walkrounds and use of radio.

Both thought I was being Boyo the Bastard when they flew with me as I was so 'picky'. In essence I would evaluate their 30hrs US as 4 hrs useful. The bad habits and attitudes took ages to kill off.

That is my experience. It is bound to be atypical. I draw no conclusions of a general nature. I am not having a go at anyone. I relate merely my experience in this area.

Happy and safe flying,

WWW
 
Old 10th Sep 1999, 23:54
  #6 (permalink)  
BEagle
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WWW - funny old thing, but those were PRECISELY the same faults that I detected. The so-called JAR-PPL graduate had the same level of skill in the circuit as a RAF UAS student might have on his/her second ever circuit session - still trying to understand how to lookout ahead to assess tracking and attitude with the odd glance at the wingtip to assess positioning whilst trying to maintain straight and level balanced flight and remember the checks!!.
 
Old 11th Sep 1999, 00:57
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JJflyer
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Cool

Hello there
Question... What schools might these .. four individuals have trained at...

I have to agree, with both of you,that the training in US was not nearly as good as that what I received in Europe.
Goundchools only slightly scratched the surface of the subject... Commercial groundschool was 4 weeks long as my private GS run 3 months and Multi combined with Commercial Inst was nearly 9 months...

A big problem here now is the low time CFI
with no experience in the real world of aviation. That might one reason that contributes to the lower than average standards of the US trained PPL:s you have dealt with.
Still every year Probably hundreds of US trained European Pilots come back and convert and get get hired with local airlines.
Why is that if they really suck ? perhaps it is actually possible to get good training over here. You just need to be careful where you go.

It was the busy enviroment and affordability of training that got me here in the first place and I have not regretted that move yet ( not a lot atleast ).
You see not everybody can afford to put thousands and thousands of pounds into training and get what 250-300 hours and a commercial and then what ?. No sir not me .

And saying that FAA to JAA licence conversions should be made impossible or that no training could be done in US is either result of lack of knowledge on the subject or very very dry humour.
That would only result in restricting pilot jobs to those only that are lucky enough to have been born into a rich family.
Solution for the JAA thing is: SCREEN THOSE CRAPPY SCHOOLS before they are authorised to do any sort of JAA training.

So what's the conclusion... Well you tell me

JJ

( My turn in the bunker )hahaha




[This message has been edited by JJflyer (edited 11 September 1999).]
 
Old 11th Sep 1999, 03:18
  #8 (permalink)  
MaxAOB
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Firstly fellow instructors let us ensure we keep our messages professional. Even if we do not like some things let us respect each other! I have 'converted' a few USA trained pilots and the range goes from the excellent to the down right dangerous - and guess what it was indicative of how much they spent!! There are some excellent schools in America but you don't save as much as everyone tells you that you can so you go cheap and end up training yourself. I love flying in the States in fact I'm going touring around the Caribean (spellcheck please) in a fortnight. - Yes I will be dodging the fly north/south for one and a half hours brigade!
Anyway I think over here we are far more standardised but the country is about the size of Dallas!!! Fly safe and if anyone knows a decent strip near Nassau let me know! Safe flying as the freezing level gets lower!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Old 11th Sep 1999, 04:31
  #9 (permalink)  
rolling circle
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This thread is undoubtedly going to degenerate into a slanging match between those who have been trained in the USA (there's nothing wrong with FAA training) and those who have had to train ex-USA trained pilots (FAA training is rubbish).

I have instructed for the USAF, the RAF, a flight school in California, both PPL and Commercial (CAP 509) schools in the UK and The Netherlands. I can say, with no hesitation, that the quality of FAA flight training is the worst that I have ever come across. In over 40 years in the flight training business I have yet to meet a FAA instructor who can actually teach.

Well, we're all entitled to our opinion, aren't we?

[This message has been edited by rolling circle (edited 11 September 1999).]
 
Old 11th Sep 1999, 04:36
  #10 (permalink)  
JJflyer
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Talking

Like I said, I have been trained in EU too...
Last thing I want is for this conversation to degenerate into a Mudshoot...

WWW : You mentioned that you had not heard about those schools before. A good name is not neccesary a guarantee for good training but tells you something.
MAX AOB : Good point there... You pretty much said it, US trained from excellent to dangerous.
ROLLING CIRCLE : So you haven't seen a good FAA instructor in all your years in the aviation. I know a few, I can introduce you.
But as you pointed out everyone has a right to an opinion, even if it is not same as mine.

JJ


[This message has been edited by JJflyer (edited 11 September 1999).]
 
Old 11th Sep 1999, 13:16
  #11 (permalink)  
BEagle
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Red face

JJ Flyer - my original post said that IF (and only IF) the 2 PPLs I'd encountered were a representative sample of US PPL training, then indeed we should encourage the CAA to ensure that JAA training at PPL level is to remain in European JAR states. Of course once a pilot has reached an acceptable level of piloting skill, he/she will be able to move on to CPL/ATPL training, but these 2 certainly haven't reached that basic level of competence. I know that senior members of the CAA SRG regularly read PPRuNe - and I hope that this thread is attracting their attention. They propose that fuel duty and VAT should be removed from bona-fide flying training, which would allow schools to compete more easily with those in the USA on costs alone. But not, of course, with the weather conditions!! However, if we win back a bigger share of flying training in this country, we'll need more FI(A)s; JAR-FCL's killing-off of the UK BCPL won't be much encouragement for pilots to become FI(A)s as they'll now need CPL level knowledge as a minimum - and if they're going to go to that level of time and expense, they're hardly likely to prefer instructing to trying to get into the airlines, I venture!!
 
Old 12th Sep 1999, 20:23
  #12 (permalink)  
LeadingEdge
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Oh my god.What a stupid,childish conversation!Professionals?????????????
 
Old 12th Sep 1999, 22:21
  #13 (permalink)  
SKYYACHT
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Firstly, I conducted a good proportion of my ab-initio training for the PPL in the US, Southern California at Long Beach. I chose this location, as it was competitively priced, and offered the chance of good continuity of training, and learning in busy class B airspace. The field is shared by Mcdonnel, and is frequently busy with C17s MD80s, and MD heavy metal, including scheduled airlines. I certainly was given no quarter by my instructor, who was ex RN, and expected me to perform correctly. I learnt correct airmanship from a variety of instructors, both US nationals, and UK ex-pats, and found very few to be un-professional. Radio discipline was strict, (If different - it took me a short while to adapt to the more precise UK standards) and I came away as a reasonably competent pilot, having been checked out by various instructors at various clubs over the years - and none of them ever commented that my flying was not up to scratch.

I would welcome HMG reducing the VAT/Duty on fuel...perhaps if flying was cheaper, more pilots would remain in currency and would then excercise a better standard of airmanship


Tailwinds

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Old 12th Sep 1999, 23:13
  #14 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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No - not stupid and childish - reasoned, tentative, balanced and interesting would be more appropriate.

WWW
 
Old 12th Sep 1999, 23:55
  #15 (permalink)  
JJflyer
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Talking

Good point SKYWATCH...

JJ
 
Old 13th Sep 1999, 00:04
  #16 (permalink)  
BEagle
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The reasoned comments of most contributors to this thread seem to be overwhelmingly conclusive; although the presence of ex-pat or ex-UK military instructors in certain US flight schools perhaps means that those flight schools are probably unrepresentatively higher in quality than other US schools, the balance of opinion seems to indicate a generally poor standard of instruction in US flight schools. Oh, and by the way, quite what was the useful contribution to this thread that Leading Edge felt that he had to offer? Apart from petulant rhetoric, that is?
 
Old 13th Sep 1999, 00:55
  #17 (permalink)  
ILSNDBVOR
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I suppose it is only natural for those trained in the US of A to jump to the defence of their training environment, but I have to say from my experience of flying with many more than BEagles '2' students from the new country that I have to agree with him. The only 'good' UK-USA student is one who has been trained by a Brit. This is understandable, how can we expect a USA instructor who has never even visited the UK let alone flown here to train to our standards? The CAA in their wisdom 'allow' these schools to use local american instructors to teach UK students, without ANY form of standardistion, oh the schools say they do, but we all know they do not. The CAA need to act now and shut all these quasi-JAA approved schools down, but as we speak this is being considered, so perhaps I am being a bit hard on my masters...

Before any 'yankees' have a go, I do believe the standard of FAA teaching is suitable for flying in the USA, it is just not suitable for this country where we have a different approach to flying.

BEagle, I congradulate you (and WWW), 2 men with the backbone to say what they mean, and I say again, it is only those that trained in the USA that leap to the defence of that industry, without understanding that we are talking about European flying and standards, not USA standards where they pay scant regard to such things as airmanship or self-help.
 
Old 13th Sep 1999, 04:44
  #18 (permalink)  
JJflyer
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Arrow

I simply stated that it is possible to get good training in US.
And that a busy airspace prepares you well for any enviroment you might encounter.

And that it is not possible to judge the whole system by evaluating 2 not even 100 students that have trained in US, as there must be hundreds of students that come back each year.
Never have I implied that system in US would be superior to that in Europe...Or other way around (Unlike some of us).

As i have trained on both continents I think that I am in a position to evaluate the standards of training better than some of us... How many of you have actually trained in US and in which schools?
Those of you reading this post that know me personally, know that I have always been very critical of US flight schools and the system in general... but I see some good in it too.
I was able to accept it.That is not the case with some of us that walk around blinded by their on magnificence.


JJ



[This message has been edited by JJflyer (edited 13 September 1999).]
 
Old 13th Sep 1999, 05:55
  #19 (permalink)  
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My experience is: Trained to BCPL/AFI and instructed in the UK, built hours in the USA, now instructing in Australia. Sadly I have to agree that those who have trained in the USA on the whole seem to have different standards than those who have trained in the UK. I recently had to almost completely retrain from scratch one guy who wanted to convert his USA PPL to Australian.

Having flown there I think an issue in the USA is that it is all so nice and user friendly, getting the weather, notams etc is all a breeze, ATC are wonderful and helpful and SOOOO polite. Perhaps it makes the pilots a wee bit complacent. Here in Aus we have to get all that information for ourselves, and in WA there aint no radar apart from the immediate vicinity of Perth. (Abovementioned chap was some 250 nm from Perth, and asked for a radar vector...) I think a lot of the descision making is too easy there, they don't have to think for themselves as much, and when they go to fly elsewhere it is overwhelming. It doesn't matter how busy the airspace or how big the other aircraft where you are learning by the way. Aviate and Navigate come before Communicate.
Re the JAA situation, I have asked if I can train for the JAA PPL here in Aus and have been told no, the training can only be done in member states. I asked if that meant the USA schools wouldn't be able to do the training and was told that was correct.
IMHO that's a good thing, because there is no such thing as "cheap" flying and too many wannabees get hurt by some of the sharks operating out there now.

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Old 13th Sep 1999, 22:31
  #20 (permalink)  
BEagle
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Thumbs up

I should add that I've also flown with PPL holders who were trained in Australia and South Africa - and they all had excellent standards of piloting skills and airmanship and were well capable of looking after themselves with only minimal supervision.

[This message has been edited by BEagle (edited 13 September 1999).]
 


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