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-   -   What was your solo time? (https://www.pprune.org/private-flying/42972-what-your-solo-time.html)

Intersection 5th Dec 2001 16:09

What was your solo time?
 
Hey all!

Just wondered about the number of hours it took everyone to go solo?

keep well!

yours
Int :rolleyes:

bow5 5th Dec 2001 16:50

My time will live in logbook forever and will forever annoy me!

Due to the slight 'over-sight' on my AME's part in the UK, he issued me with an FAA Class 2 and 'forgot' to include a student pilot certificate. So there are am ready to solo after 8 hours but am unable to do so because I have no Student Pilot Cert. Cos I was only in the US for 3 weeks I had to get the hours in which meant a 3.5 hour X-country which took me to 11.5 hours. THEN...I had to fly to a different airport to catch up with the only fAA chap in FL who could issue me with a SPC.

So...after all that 4.5 hours after I was ready, I flew back to ISM, out jumped my instructor and off I went.

12.5 hours but should have been sooner. grrrr :rolleyes:


Edited for uneccesary 'langauge'

[ 05 December 2001: Message edited by: bow5 ]

Matthewjharvey 5th Dec 2001 17:11

10 hours.

bcfc 5th Dec 2001 19:07

16 hrs. Was ready after 13 but wx & wind was lousy for 3 weeks so kept griding the circuit with the lump next to me.

My father in law solo'd after 7 but that was in the 50's and I'm not sure with JAR you can solo much before 10, can you? Anyway, not ashamed I took so long. I solo'd as soon as I could, when I was ready.

foxmoth 5th Dec 2001 19:17

Like one of the other posts I was waiting for my student pilots licence (in the UK though, just showing my age!)so a few hours later than I should have gone.
I had a student though who had been recommended by a few instructors to give up, I gave him the same advice but he said that he enjoyed flying and wanted to keep going, I then continued with less emphasis on circuits and he finaly went solo after 60hrs+.

[ 05 December 2001: Message edited by: foxmoth ]

B9 5th Dec 2001 19:35

In the early days of microlighting in the UK my first flight was also my first solo.

Genghis the Engineer 5th Dec 2001 19:42

16 hours on Bulldogs, a 2 year break, then another 10 hours on something else. It got better after that.

SouthXross 5th Dec 2001 19:46

8.3 Hours (Helicopter)

hoverbover 5th Dec 2001 19:51

Fixed Wing = 7.5 Hrs
Rotary Wing = 9.5 Hrs

But that was only the beginning!!!!
Regards
Hover Bover

suction 5th Dec 2001 20:08

At 16, after 5 hrs of dual my instructor announced me ready to solo in a Venture self-launching motor glider. It took about 5 seconds for the enormity of this to sink in - and another 5 hundreths of a second for the subsequent lapse of personal hygiene to kick in.

Took about 5 weeks to come down from the buzz of doing it though :D :D :D

IFollowRoads 5th Dec 2001 21:03

First landing at 4:15. It went downhill from there, first solo at 13:30. Howeverm I haven't bent one since! :eek:

Whipping Boy's SATCO 5th Dec 2001 21:16

First time round - 7.10hrs on the third sucessive day of training.

15 years later - 2.00hrs.

They say it's like riding a bike!

Whirlybird 5th Dec 2001 21:21

Er.....



I used to avoid subjects like this, but now I've been flying too long to care.



Fixed wing - around 48. An instructor told me some time afterwards he'd thought I'd never make it, and several others had agreed. When I asked him who the several others were he didn't seem to know though.



Rotary - around 30. I was told I was ready at about 17, but then things started going wrong.



I'm a slow learner. :(



But I get there in the end. :) :) :)



So do I get the booby prize then? :D

DodgyFlyer 5th Dec 2001 22:12

Went solo in C152 after 7.45

And it went horribly wrong, finally got the ppl though.

With exceptional willpower I am resisting having a go at rotary.

Southern Cross 5th Dec 2001 23:12

11. I learned in the largest circuit you could imagine, which is at Wellington International airport. There were 3 holding areas in the down wind leg where ATC could ask you to take up a hold (ie fly circles). This was not infrequent, as you had to fit in and around scheduled arrivals and departures. You could only turn crosswind above 1000' agl and could only turn downwind at 1500' agl. In a Tomahawk. So the number of circuits per hour could be "few"...

At least there was no excuse for not setting up final approach properly, since it was a hell of a long way.

Oh, and it is often pretty windy in Wellington - so ground speed on finals could be pretty slow...

g-okay 5th Dec 2001 23:22

6H 55mins at perth on a RAF flying schol, with a very saw head from the night before, i seem to remember, (not much!!!) hey elkeefo you still knockin around. ;)

Chilli Monster 6th Dec 2001 12:27

3 hours, PA38 Traumahawk :)

But it was a Silver 'C' gliding conversion :D

CM

Who has control? 6th Dec 2001 12:30

About 16 hours, I think. I didn't really want to do it, as I had to be at another airport soon after my lesson to collect my mum, so it was all a bit rushed. We came back later in the day for the 'Handing over the Certificate' Photo.

I think I was more nervous on my first solo cross country. It wasn't through fear of getting lost, after all, its difficult to lose two the huge reservoirs which were my turning points, but just being alone and having to do everything for mtself. It was a great feeling of success afterwards though.

ShyTorque 6th Dec 2001 14:18

I have an acquaintance, a (now retired) engineer, who solo'd in an aircraft he rebuilt himself.

He finished the restoration, fast taxied it a few times and flew it.

Total personal flight time to first solo? NIL!!

He had read a book on it though so that was alright.

Yes, he did go on to get a licence and no, I won't give you his name. ;)

Spacer 6th Dec 2001 14:24

7hrs 15mins on my flying scholarship back in 1999. On the UAS about 9hrs. Oh, and after 45 launches on RAF gliders. But each first solo is still pretty cool.


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