Flight training section of Integrated training
Thread Starter
Joined: Sep 2023
Posts: 44
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From: London
Flight training section of Integrated training
Trying to find out about the 26 week ish flight training section of an integrated programme and what a day normally looks like for a trainee? I presume a flight would be say 9-10 or similar, are there any requirements outside of flying during that phase of training?
Joined: Sep 2022
Aviation Qualifications: ATPL
Posts: 328
Likes: 183
From: Perpetually circling OCK for some reason
If you’re flying regularly then it is quite busy.
After a flight (and the hour or so debrief) you have notes to go over, maybe some chair flying or even work on an instrument trainer. Beforehand you’ll go over notes and brief yourself based on what the lesson plan is, as well as potentially draw up a PLOG, mark up charts, look at weather, read NOTAMS, run performance etc. You’ll also need to do general reading around of air law, the aircraft POH and the like as you integrate what you learned in ATPLs in a practical setting. You’ll then be briefed by your instructor. Normally the student will also pre flight the aeroplane, super keen students who get noticed for jobs and recommendations hang around and drag aircraft out of hangers etc. and maybe help out in ops.
There’s down time, but you don’t just rock up and fly for 90 minutes then go to the pub. A lot of students could save themselves a lot of money by learning stuff on the ground (flows, performance, affects of controls, systems, weather etc) rather than in the air when they’re paying an instructor. It is in the very dim and distant past for me now but we used to go and sit in one of the tech aircraft and chair fly circuits.
If and when you get to an airline, the first TR is like drinking from a firehose and getting into good study habits will pay dividends.
Learning how to break down a flight plan, NOTAMs, weather, MEL/tech issues is an invaluable skill that you will begin to hone during flight training.
Seen from your post history you are on the speedbird academy - congratulations, see you at Heathrow some day.
After a flight (and the hour or so debrief) you have notes to go over, maybe some chair flying or even work on an instrument trainer. Beforehand you’ll go over notes and brief yourself based on what the lesson plan is, as well as potentially draw up a PLOG, mark up charts, look at weather, read NOTAMS, run performance etc. You’ll also need to do general reading around of air law, the aircraft POH and the like as you integrate what you learned in ATPLs in a practical setting. You’ll then be briefed by your instructor. Normally the student will also pre flight the aeroplane, super keen students who get noticed for jobs and recommendations hang around and drag aircraft out of hangers etc. and maybe help out in ops.
There’s down time, but you don’t just rock up and fly for 90 minutes then go to the pub. A lot of students could save themselves a lot of money by learning stuff on the ground (flows, performance, affects of controls, systems, weather etc) rather than in the air when they’re paying an instructor. It is in the very dim and distant past for me now but we used to go and sit in one of the tech aircraft and chair fly circuits.
If and when you get to an airline, the first TR is like drinking from a firehose and getting into good study habits will pay dividends.
Learning how to break down a flight plan, NOTAMs, weather, MEL/tech issues is an invaluable skill that you will begin to hone during flight training.
Seen from your post history you are on the speedbird academy - congratulations, see you at Heathrow some day.
Thread Starter
Joined: Sep 2023
Posts: 44
Likes: 0
From: London
Thank you Speed_Trim_Fail much appreciated. Just working out how it all works as I have heard different things and yes, keen to get suck in and put it all into practice!
Joined: Sep 2022
Aviation Qualifications: ATPL
Posts: 328
Likes: 183
From: Perpetually circling OCK for some reason
Thank you Speed_Trim_Fail much appreciated. Just working out how it all works as I have heard different things and yes, keen to get suck in and put it all into practice!
Last edited by Speed_Trim_Fail; 26th November 2024 at 19:36.




