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IMC/ IR what's the difference????

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Old 21st Oct 2005, 14:02
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IMC/ IR what's the difference????

Can someone be kind enough to tell me the difference between the IMC rating and the IR rating? is the IR much more difficult and is there much more to learn or is it simply a difference on minimas.

If you pass the IMC is it straight forward to pass the IR as well?


thanks

Jam
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Old 21st Oct 2005, 14:12
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The IMC rating, is basically a "instrument rating-light" there is a little less you have to do for it, and the hour requirement is less. In return among other things, the minimums are higher.

It is a UK rating, and only valid in the UK

The IMC rating is not an instrument rating and, originally intended for getting people out of trouble when they get stuck, should not be used as such.

If you are planning on doing your instrument rating, getting the IMC rating first won't give you an advantage really.
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Old 21st Oct 2005, 14:23
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Except it would be the cheapest actual instrument instruction that you would get!
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Old 21st Oct 2005, 15:35
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thanks for the replies,

Another point, the Trevor Thom book's of which i think series 6 is for instrument flying, would that be geared for the IMC or for the IR?

how much more is there in the IR than the IMC with regards to Radio navigation. I am reading through this book and i cant seem to think what more there is in the IR than what's covered in the book e.g. NDB's, VOR's, approaches, SID, STAR's, ILS etc etc???

anyone know?


cheers
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Old 21st Oct 2005, 15:41
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Except it would be the cheapest actual instrument instruction that you would get!
Is that bit of money worth killing yourself for? Like i said, the IMC rating was meant to get you out of trouble, not in trouble.

A normal instrument rating course is about 45-50 hours. What makes people think they can do the same after 15 hours? Because the simple fact is, they can't, and they should not.

I've trained people for the IMC, and they have passed their checkrides, but i don't believe in the rating for the simple fact that too many people use it as an instrument rating. Besides the UK, there are not alot of other countries who (still) have one. (I would say none, but i am not sure about that). I imagine that is for a reason.

People who get the IMC rating, to use it as an instrument rating are, to my opinion, not fit to have that rating to begin with.

Last edited by -IBLB-; 21st Oct 2005 at 17:01.
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Old 22nd Oct 2005, 07:20
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I've got an IMC which I use like an IR.....And I never even sat an IMC exam nor took a flight test Am I fit to hold the rating?
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Old 22nd Oct 2005, 08:31
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About the only extra in the IR is airways navigation. The IMC Rating does not entitle you to fly airways or in IMC in Class A airspace - although in VMC, SVFR is permissible with the relevant clearance in, for example, Class A CTRs. But not for en-route airways flying.

For the IR, you will probably spend hours and hours grinding round the NDB hold - this seems an obsession of most FTOs!

The main problem is that you will need to pass much more stringent CAA exams, many of which have precious little to do with Instrument Flying. You will need to sit them at a regional test centre, do your flying training at a FTO and take the IR Skill Test with a CAA Staff Examiner - plus the CAA still use the IR Skill Test as the final filter for commercial flying suitability, rather than as an assessment of safe IF skills as the military do. Whereas for the IMC Rating you can do everything at a RF and take the test with a suitably qualified PPL/FE.

There is some light at the end of the tunnel though. AOPA started an initiative to have the JAR-FCL IR(A) brought closer to ICAO requirements and to have the theoretical knowledge requirements eased.

Few aircraft used for the IMC Rating Test have the luxury of RMIs or stable gyro compasses, so the specific handling skills are different to those needed for the IR. Battling with a crosswind NDB approach in a less-than-young Cherokee with a primitive ADF and fixed card RBI with only a DI for guidance is a lot more difficult than just towing the tail of a RMI whilst referring to a nice accurate HSI....

The IMC Rating is often denigrated by self-important IR holders who have never held an IMC rating. It is an extremely useful rating and should not be thought of as merely a 'get me out of this' rating!
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Old 22nd Oct 2005, 10:19
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I go my IR in 15 hours??? Is that bad
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Old 23rd Oct 2005, 10:00
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I've always imagined the difference in standards required between an IMC and an IR as akin to the difference required between a PPL and a CPL.

At one level you need to be safe and competent, at the other safe, competent and professional.

Fair assessment?
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Old 23rd Oct 2005, 13:04
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No.



In a word.

There's another word for anyone who isn't professional in IMC....



....dead.
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Old 23rd Oct 2005, 15:59
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BEagle,

Although I know what you mean, I also know what bfato means, and I think you are both right in your own way.

For example, when "grinding round the NDB hold", the IR pilot will be looking to see if the gate is coming in at the correct rate, assessing his position and altering it if necessary; checking the needle is leading him onto his inbound track correctly during the inbound turn; checking his stopwatch and adjusting the timing if it's not spot on. This is a very professional attitude to flying a hold (albeit that "professional", or commercial, pilots rarely grind around the hold, and if they do they often have an autopilot to do it for them).

An IMC-rated pilot, on the other hand, might fly his planned outbound heading for his planned time, turn inbound and make some corrections to get back on track. If his planned headings and times are grossly wrong he might adjust them. He will hold his altitude accurately, and his track will keep him well within the protected area for the hold. So although his approach to the hold might not be quite so "professional", he is most certainly not dead!

I think maybe a better summary is that the Instrument Rated pilot is taught skills which enable him to operate the aircraft in a more thoroughly professional method. But both pilots will use the skills and methods which they have been taught in a totally professional manner in order to avoid being dead.

Now..... discuss!!!

FFF
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Old 23rd Oct 2005, 16:46
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So IR boys and girls do "pretty holds" and IMC pilots do "functional holds" both of which do the same job.......and at the end of the day it doesn't matter because a "professional pilot" will have his FMS fly it for him anyway

Guess thats why they charge more for IR training over IMC training (never worked that one out)
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Old 23rd Oct 2005, 19:53
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An NDB is a non-precision navigational aid. There is a requirement to make 'due allowance' to compensate for the effects of head/tail and crosswind effects when in the hold. And that is all there is to it.

But all the crap about 'gates' etc is something dreamed up by some who relish the idea of turning something very basic into something unnecessarily complicated. Usually FTO IR instructors on the edge of senility who last flew a real aeroplane in the days of Viscounts.

"...checking the needle is leading him onto his inbound track correctly during the inbound turn"? I was always advised to believe my calculations and not to pre-empt the ADF indications during turns due to the effects of dip.......
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 08:49
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If you are planning on doing your instrument rating, getting the IMC rating first won't give you an advantage really.
It all depends on what you mean by advantage! I believe the IMC rating will help as it gives the candidate insight and experience on instruments and in return it knocks 5 hours of your IR minimum training hours.

will
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 09:22
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thanks all for your replies.

I am nowhere near either rating. However, as i have been reading this book, i was a bit confused as to how much more there is in the IR rating. I mean apart from IR test being flown in Class A and along airways, surely there can't be that much more in the IR syllabus than in the the IMC???
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 09:25
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wbryce, the IMC does NOT knock 5 hours off the IR course, the CPL does.
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 09:58
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blah argg! grrr..

Thanks for informing me of my error!
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 10:58
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Sure I'll get corrected if wrong but the IMC does not allow flight within airways, and this is a big point especially if flying anywhere near a major hub.

Oh, and having a full IR gets you 5 hours off the CPL requirements as well.

Also the MDA/MDH for an IMC is, considerably, higher than an IR

Cheers

Last edited by wobble2plank; 24th Oct 2005 at 13:49.
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Old 24th Oct 2005, 18:06
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Wobble2plank, not quite I'm afraid.
the IMC does not allow flight within airways
That's true, but:
this is a big point especially if flying anywhere near a major hub
that's not true. You can't use the IMC rating in Class A airspace, but that still allows you to get into every airport in the UK except for Heathrow, Northolt and the Channel Islands airports.
Oh, and having a full IR gets you 5 hours off the CPL requirements as well
I think (and I'd have to look this up to confirm) it actually gives you 10 hours off the CPL. (Are you getting confused with doing it the other way around? Having a CPL gives you 5 hours off the IR, maybe that's where you got your 5 from?)
Also the MDA/MDH for an IMC is, considerably, higher than an IR
That's true (almost, anyway). But on the other hand, if you're flying a single-engined aircraft (as most IMC-rating holders do) you wouldn't want to fly with a 200' cloudbase anyway.... what would you do if the engine quit in those conditions?

So, in conclusion, the priveleges of the IMC-rating really don't restrict the private pilot in a single-engine aircraft in any practical way beyond what he would be able to do with an instrument rating, other than that it can't be used outside the UK. But whichever rating you have, it's equally important to keep it current.

FFF
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Old 25th Oct 2005, 08:24
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IMHO, not being able to fly IMC in Class A airspace restricts your choice of aircraft, altitude and your routing, full stop. You wouldn't take a turbo prop low level because you can't file for an airway, think of the fuel burn!!!!

Apologies, I converted an ATPL(H) to and ATPL(A) which gave me a requirement for a 15 hour CPL(A) conversion, reduced by 5 hours when completed with a valid fixed wing IR, nominal course requirement 20, therefore 20-15=5.

You say that you wouldn't want to fly in a cloudbase of 200', quite correct most people wouldn't. Personally I wouldn't fly IFR if I didn't have to, nicer to see the ground! If, however, you have to get somewhere and the weather worsens drastically the the 200' MDA/MDH can help, I know I've used it (commercial requirements). If that doesn't really matter, why is it there? I think you will find that the IR is expected to be able to complete with a faster scan and tighter limitations.

I don't say that there is a two tier system, each to his own, but there has to be a differentiation between the two otherwise why do we have them. Otherwise why do I have to pay so b*****y much for my re-cats
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