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-   -   Derek Davidson (https://www.pprune.org/private-flying/582003-derek-davidson.html)

r10bbr 24th July 2016 17:11

Derek Davidson
 
hi a fellow newbie here, wanted to ask has anyone come across the following site:

Derek Davidson Pilot Training - Derek Davidson Flight Instructor and Examier

in particular the '' 3 WEEK EASA PPL COMPLETION ''
any feedback or reviews would be grateful , as that i am deciding whether to travel to the states to complete my PPL or here in the UK, also is it possible to complete the PPL in the 3 weeks period, if flying is observed on average 3/4 hours a day?

Cenus_ 24th July 2016 17:14

I'd suggest three weeks is ambitious with British weather!

pulse1 24th July 2016 18:02

Derek Davidson does seem to get results for his customers but I agree that 3 weeks is ambitious, especially if the 2016 weather pattern continues. Having said that, he recently completed a renewal GFT for a seriously lapsed PPL of a neighbour of mine in the most appalling weather.

MrAverage 25th July 2016 09:04

I'd say it depends how much you've done already, both studying and flight training. If starting from scratch, the chances of finishing in 3 weeks in the UK are very slim.

r10bbr 26th July 2016 03:57

i have completed all my ground exams, currently i have flown just shy of 45 hours, waiting to go solo, then complete cross country/nav etc. i'v decided to change schools due to being treated like a second class person, as that either my instructor does not place me in his schedule or that i have to alternate between 2/3/4 different instructors and have been doing circuits for the last 6 lessons..

hobbit1983 26th July 2016 07:03

Circuits often takes that long, or more. Have you discussed your issues with your instructor and/or the school?

r10bbr 26th July 2016 14:33

i have discussed the matter with the school and instructor, and to be honest i feel i am being mucked about as that i have told them that i am free for 7 months and could i be booked in advance but i have been ignored, thus i am looking elsewhere

Cusco 26th July 2016 15:30

I see you've done 45 hours but still not gone solo: Could I ask how long you've been flying?

It might be relevant to your original question.

Cusco

r10bbr 26th July 2016 17:09

been flying since late Feb 2016

ArthurG 26th July 2016 18:01

I'm spending 3 days with Derek D next week to convert from NPPL microlight to SSEA and then to LAPL(A). I'll let you know how I get on.

r10bbr 26th July 2016 18:35

Hi Arthur, i wish you the very best , do let us know how you get on

r10bbr 27th July 2016 14:56

can any one refer me to schools within the uk that do intensive PPL Course?
regards

Genghis the Engineer 27th July 2016 17:26

If you have the money, pretty much any of them.

G

r10bbr 27th July 2016 20:50

can you perhaps and state some of them please

hobbit1983 27th July 2016 20:56

GoFly at Old Sarum (I don't work for them) I can say are pretty good. I'm sure Tom (the Ops Manger) would be able to accommodate you.

Genghis the Engineer 27th July 2016 21:38

Certainly two, probably all three of the flying schools at Cranfield, West London Aero Club at White Waltham, Tayside at Dundee, Western Air at Thruxton...

... basically, just go talk to any school, explain what you want to achieve, and any which is any good (which is most of them) will work with you to achieve that.

The Flyer Magazine "learn to fly guide" will list most of the schools in the UK - after that it's mostly geography.

G

JDJ 27th July 2016 22:46

Yes, you just have to ask - most schools will sort something out for you. I remember doing 2 weeks at Welshpool many moons ago. It's a good idea flying on weekdays - more availability of aircraft!


Originally Posted by r10bbr (Post 9453736)
can any one refer me to schools within the uk that do intensive PPL Course?
regards


MrAverage 28th July 2016 10:06

r10bbr
We can help at Elstree, which should allow you to commute, depending how deep into Essex you are.
Feel free to send me a PM.

r10bbr 29th July 2016 18:04

i am located in South Woodford,

Whirlybird 29th July 2016 20:09

It doesn't sound to me as though you need an intensive course. These are designed for people who haven't done any flying, to get them a PPL quickly. If I've understood correctly, you've done 45 hours flying and all your ground exams, but you're being messed around. It sounds as though you need a school which is prepared to accommodate your schedule, and an instructor you can fly with regularly that you get on with. That's slightly different. I'd suggest you visit a few flying schools, talk to instructors, talk to students, and get a feel for each place. Tell them what you want to do, and see how they react. You're not asking for anything that complicated.

gyrotyro 30th July 2016 16:55

Derek Davidson
 
I did some of my PPL training with Derek and then later my initial IMC rating.

He is a first class in instructor, old school and now as he is 80 really old school!

He gets the job done and is thorough and reliable.

Give him a call.

r10bbr 30th July 2016 18:05

how much did Derek charge you, I'm gone see how it goes with Derek before looking at other schools, i really would like to finish before september intake for ATPL

Momoe 30th July 2016 22:17

3 weeks isn't impossible. I did mine in 3 weeks and 1 day because the day of the GFT was unflyable.

I did mine at Clacton on C152/C172 for navex's but circuit work/general flying was in Supercubs, I went for the tail dragger option as I was looking to get into a syndicate with a Chipmunk and a Tigermoth.

Read your reference material until you know it inside out and everything is clear, on the days when flying isn't advisable, get your exams out of the way.
Any days when flying is possible, grab an instructor and go, I went solo fairly early and did circuits ad nauseum till they let me go on navex's.

I paid 50% up front, 25% half way through and balance after 3 weeks.
I lodged with one of the instructors so that kept costs down and guaranteed me getting there on time every day.

Agree with Whirly and airpolice, you want to become qualified and pay money to do it, it's not complicated - find somewhere that will accommodate you but be prepared to commit yourself fully also.

p.s. Didn't get in the Chippy/Moth syndicate, but ended up in an Auster group which was great fun.

r10bbr 30th July 2016 22:50

Momoe, i have done all my exams and now i have just the skills test to do, i really hoped my first flying school whom i paid to do my ppl would have accommodate me and put me first but it seems i was just another figure where instructors chose when to fly not when student was available

Whirlybird 31st July 2016 09:04

"i have done all my exams and now i have just the skills test to do".

I thought you said in an earlier post that you hadn't yet gone solo and had all the nav etc to do. Which is it?

r10bbr 31st July 2016 14:31

i have completed all the PPL exams , and have just left the skills test to do, i have yet to go solo and from my exercise sheet i have been told i have to do the following after solo, which are cross country / solo cross country etc

hobbit1983 31st July 2016 23:03

You do know you need a minimum of 10 hours solo prior to skills test...?

r10bbr 31st July 2016 23:26

yes i do understand, just frustrated at being mucked about with my first school and hope to complete my ppl in start of September intake for ATPLs

glum 1st August 2016 12:03

I'm very surprised at the number of hours you've flown without going solo.

I did it at about hour 15 I think, and I'm aware others will do it in less than 10.

This post isn't to question your ability, it's to question the syllabus - I presumed it was standard, and that each student worked through the same lessons in order meaning you'd get to lesson X "solo circuit" and fly it once the instructor thought you ready?

Can instructors mix and match the lesson order?

r10bbr 1st August 2016 12:29

i too am surprised & distraught i assumed i would have flown solo in under 20 hours, where i have learnt my PPL I'm not sure whether instructors can mix and match lesson order's but from my knowledge and what i was told after solo i had the following left to complete : Forced landing without power/Precautionary landings/Navigation/Navigation at lower levels and reduced visibility/Radio navigation/Basic instrument flight

i just hope i can complete the following within the 3 weeks as stated by Derek Davidson, thus i can start my ATPLS in September

Auster Fan 1st August 2016 13:26

I wish you well, but as others have said, think you're being pretty optimistic, not least because of the vagaries of the British weather, especially where preparation for and completing your Qualifying Cross Country is concerned...You've not made any mention of the oral/practical radio exam you will need to pass either? Have you passed that along with the other written exams?

r10bbr 1st August 2016 17:09

i have passed my radio exams and the 9 exams just the flying left

Genghis the Engineer 1st August 2016 17:16

All the difficult bits then!

I can absolutely see why you need to consider changing school, but equally you'd only be starting ATPL groundschool in September as you won't have the hours to do the flying course - and there are plenty of those that will start any time.

Best of luck, yes do seriously look at changing school, but I think you need to be realistic about what's achievable in the timescale you're aiming for. And, being frank, whether you have the aptitude to go "pro" if you've not soloed in that many hours at a reasonably intensive flying rate (I'm sure you are up to getting a PPL eventually, but the professional licences do take a significantly higher standard of flying).

G

Whirlybird 1st August 2016 20:38

r10bbr, some of what you say seems a bit strange. You haven't soloed yet, after 40+ hours. That in itself is normal for some of us. It took me that long, and some others too. But it usually means you haven't reached the standard for an instructor to let you fly an aircraft alone. There are many reasons for that. It may be due to poor instruction, lack of aptitude, slow learning ability, unsuitable weather, a difficult airfield at which to learn, and possibly other reasons too. In my case and I suspect many others, it was all of the above.

Now, it may be that you're different, and for some reason your instructors are holding you back although you're good enough to go solo, but it seems unlikely. That rarely happens. Either way, it's about time you changed school and instructor, and try to get some honest feedback as to what your problems are, and why you haven't soloed yet.

As to trying to finish by September, you might, but it's going to be hard. You summarise the exercises you have to do; well, trust me, that's quite a lot! If you're a very fast learner and have good instruction and ideal weather you might manage it in three weeks, but most people wouldn't. It may well take you longer, and maybe you should get used to that idea.

On that point, please don't worry if it takes you a long time. I don't agree with what Genghis said; even some of us slow learners can 'go pro'. It just takes us a little longer, that's all. I got my CPL and instructor's rating, but eventually I gave up expecting to do anything at all in minimum hours. As a newish helicopter instructor, I had a student who couldn't seem to learn, and I passed him on to the CFI in case it was my fault. This chap wanted to get a CPL(H), but eventually a couple of instructors sat down with him and explained that he could probably do it, but it would take a long time. He was so relieved to realise he could make it and we weren't giving up on him that his flying improved quite a bit. You see, putting yourself under time pressure doesn't help, and often hinders your progress!

So I'd say stop trying to rush things, find a school and instructor you get on with, and learn at YOUR pace. Of course I may be wrong in all of the above, because you haven't told us everything and I'm not psychic; this is just based on what I think has been happening. Feel free to ignore all I've said if you want. But hopefully some of it will help.

r10bbr 1st August 2016 21:18

i appreciate all the feedback to summarise i have completed all the 9 exams but have yet to take the skills test or go solo

yes it differs people to people but from what i have stated i may need another 20 or 30 lessons, from what i gathered in terms of the exercises that are left from the syllabus

what annoyed me as to why i decided to change schools/instructors and seek alternative options is that during my PPL training even after telling the school/instructors i have taken 6 months off to complete the PPL as a whole, i have had 5 instructors in total all alternating with my lessons and feel that favouritism are been given to the new students/international students, thus sticking with one instructor is hard as it is due to not been given slots to fly etc

my initial thread was about DerekDavidsons 3 weeks PPL completion possibility and review, thus i wanted to ask if anyone had completed this course or knew of someone, looking back on it i feel i should have gone to the states back when i started, by now i would have completed my PPL and some what be in between my ATPLS

i appreciate all the replys to this thread and hope i have not come across like a head less chicken or a drama queen. i do understand it takes time & effort and money to complete the PPL but i feel that the flying school should have made me a priority even after i have told them my situation and my free time, but i will bot rant about that here

Genghis the Engineer 1st August 2016 21:53

Fair point Whirly - knowing you and your flying background pretty well, I agree that you do demonstrate that slow does not (necessarily) equate to poor - you proved that conclusively.

G

Parson 2nd August 2016 09:55

r10bbr

Don't be disheartened about what has happened. What's done is done - draw a line under it and set yourself a plan for the rest of your flying (and career if that is what you intend).

I wouldn't recommend rushing to get your PPL done so that you can start your ground school. The PPL isn't a 'tick in the box' on your way to becoming a professional pilot. You are learning fundamental skills that you will build on later and you do not want to develop any bad habits.

The CPL is really just a glorified PPL in a complex aircraft, flown to tighter limits. And the IR is effectively visual flying by other means. If you can't fly straight and level and in trim at PPL level you are going struggle with your IR course. I'm not up to speed with current rates but I suspect that a typical IR training route is pushing £1000 these days so any extra training needed is going to hurt....

Try schools close to home initially - always good to be in your own bed at night. Explain your situation and find an instructor/school you are comfortable with and come up with a plan to complete your PPL and importantly hone the skills you will need as you develop.

And don't forget to enjoy it....

Momoe 2nd August 2016 13:33

Parson,

although there is nothing like being in your own bed, the 3 week intensive course I did meant that I lived and breathed aviation for the entire period.

I wanted a PPL and there was nothing else on my mind, I did struggle initially as I was trying to take in learning to fly (although I had about 3 hours stick time) through a friend, getting exams out of the way and it was a very steep curve.
Getting exams out of the way and being able to concentrate on flying was a big milestone and going solo was the other big one.

I strongly believe that immersing myself was the best way for me and might work for others too, we are all different but flying virtually every day consolidated what I had learnt, basically, there was no appreciable time lapses to forget anything.

This meant that I became confident of my nav skills and would use NDB's and VOR's to cross check position to the extent that I would get navex's when the weather was less than optimal.

Chipping away at a PPL at weekends and a few hours in the week doesn't give you that, maybe this suits some people but it definitely will take longer and it will almost certainly cost you more, not just in up front capital but in incidental costs such as travelling.

The OP is frustrated with their lack of progress so with all the ground work completed, I would try a weeks intensive course and see how that goes.
If it goes well, the confidence gained will go a long way to ensuring the rest of the flying part of the PPL is completed expediently.

Parson 2nd August 2016 15:23

Momoe,

I've nothing against an intensive flying course - after all, CPL and IR are just that. Point I was making was not to rush things to hit what would appear to be an arbitrary date to start groundschool.

The other side of the coin to intensive flying (and of course more gradual learning) is maintaining those skills....

parkfell 2nd August 2016 22:06

Learning to fly takes time. You need to be able to absorb it at your pace. Osmosis?
Pushing too hard, three lessons a day is futile. You are not a machine with a positronic brain.
What is important long term is the quality. Get it right at the PPL stage, and the CPL/IR stage will be straight forward.
And probably the most important basic skill is TRIMMING, and trimming well.
Acquire this skill, and it will stay on rails. Failure to trim well ends up in a constant battle of Man v. machine.
40+ hours without first solo is a cause for concern.........


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