PPRuNe Forums

PPRuNe Forums (https://www.pprune.org/)
-   Professional Pilot Training (includes ground studies) (https://www.pprune.org/professional-pilot-training-includes-ground-studies-14/)
-   -   How Many Hours did it take you? (https://www.pprune.org/professional-pilot-training-includes-ground-studies/174580-how-many-hours-did-take-you.html)

Somedaymaybe 12th May 2005 17:16

How Many Hours did it take you?
 
Just purely a Question, so I can take a look at the rest of the country, and see how other fellow students did.

How long did it take you in hrs to complete your PPL?

(Including skills test and the rest)

SDM
:ok:

The Greaser 12th May 2005 17:42

Fifty Four - FAA PPL

YYZ 12th May 2005 19:29

45.1.

Might of been better putting this question under "Private Flying" though?

YYZ:8

Sky Wave 12th May 2005 22:48

45hr 05mn Lucky the skills test wasn't 10 minutes shorter!

cjam 12th May 2005 22:55

Fifty five I think....it doesn't mean a thing tho, Chichester took that long to go solo and was one of the finest and most respected pilots/navigators of all time.

High Wing Drifter 13th May 2005 06:49

JAA - 47 hours and 57 minutes all in over six months.

Don't put this under Private Flying unless you want to be hung up on a meat hook and left to cure whilst they decide what to serve you up with :ouch: ;)

HomerJay 13th May 2005 07:13

Had the PPL on the button 45.0

Sensible 13th May 2005 07:38

45.6 hrs in the USA within a 3 week time frame - can't easily be done in the UK though! - Got the license in three weeks, but been practising for some few years since and still not perfected the art!

Foz2 13th May 2005 08:33

45 hours on the nail for the course and then 1.7 for the test. I took 5 months from November to March.

Foz

PilotOnline 13th May 2005 08:42

45.1 hrs for the training and about 1.8 for the test over exactly 12 months...because I jinx the weather in the UK every time I have a plane booked!

Piltdown Man 13th May 2005 09:32

16 hours, but it took six months - the weather was rubbish! (A Silver C from gliding reduced the legal minimum to something like 11 hours dual and three hous solo - but omitted the tests.

Megaton 13th May 2005 09:43

CAA PPL 40 hrs 35 mins. Grrr what a waste of 35 mins!

Blinkz 13th May 2005 10:04

16hrs from a Silver C? how you manage that? or is it a NPPL? the JAA PPL will only credit you 10 hours towards your PPL.

CAT3C AUTOLAND 13th May 2005 10:43

I really don't see the relevance of this question, or am I missing something?

High Wing Drifter 13th May 2005 11:21


I really don't see the relevance of this question, or am I missing something?
Human interest. Nothing wrong with that :p

Whipping Boy's SATCO 13th May 2005 12:43

38 - in the days where the requirement was 38.

cosworth211 13th May 2005 12:44

48hrs, completed over 5 months, while studying also at university.

Hows about average exam scores?

Mine was 98.5% or something.

Blinkz 13th May 2005 14:38

Sorry for causing any upset :sad: Like High Wing Drifter said I was just curious.

I myself have just passed my skill test (yesturday!) and did it in 61hrs 15mins. It would have been less but I got a partial the first time so had to spend another 3-4 practicing my emergencies lol.

Exam success was something like 98% as well.

Gillespie 13th May 2005 16:20

got mine in 45 hours within 1 month of damn hard work!

Dude~ 13th May 2005 17:47

Are we talking PPL exams or ATPL exams?

Gillespie 13th May 2005 19:32

DUDE~

ATPL exams take about 750 hours of study.....I'd eat my hat if someone can do them in 45!

EOD 13th May 2005 20:25

38hrs,over about 8 months.

Whirlygig 13th May 2005 23:57

Isn't it funny that most who have posted on here are very close to the minimum requirements? Which is not a true reflection of the general averages.

So, to buck the trend; 67 hours for PPL(H).

It is not a particularly good indicator of how good a pilot you are or will be. In fact, there is much anecdotal evidence to suggest that the longer one took, the better pilot they may be in the long term. There are many other factors including the attitude of your instructor or school, whether part time (over how long?) or full time etc.

As for exam marks - you pass. That is all that is required. I could tell you my average but, as a girl, I don't have a willy to wave.

Cheers

Whirlygig

Sensible 14th May 2005 08:30

Whirlygig,

It is not a particularly good indicator of how good a pilot you are or will be
I have to disagree, based on my own experience, I don't think that I was anything like properly trained after minimum hours. I didn't had any "mishaps" so I suppose that I was trained after a fashion but I needed a lot more dual especially in the instrument flying department since I very nearly had a nasty end flying into inadvertent IMC conditions shortly after obtaining my PPL. I believe that incident would have been less likely to have occurred if I was better trained both in practical flying and by way of ground school to be able to identify the conditions to avoid.

It is my belief that a lot of PPL's do not continue to fly once they have their license simply because they cannot justify flying around their home airport like a fly around a jam pot and are somewhat nervous of longer excursions which pose threats of encountering bad weather and getting lost etc. On the other hand, longer training would be likely to put a lot of people off of training in the first place on cost grounds. So, the choice is to put a post solo student in the air with a license and leave him/her to learn by experience or ensure that they have additional training under supervision and give them the license after their instructor/examiner feels that they are adequately trained. Just my opinion.

High Wing Drifter 14th May 2005 08:46


It is not a particularly good indicator of how good a pilot you are or will be.
Agreed! Far too many variables.


In fact, there is much anecdotal evidence to suggest that the longer one took, the better pilot they may be in the long term.
I image only if the rigour is commensurate with extra time taken.


I could tell you my average but, as a girl, I don't have a willy to wave.
Can the same be said for Air Transilvania?

Future Pundit 14th May 2005 08:49

37 hours for a JAR PPL in 2002. Used the 10 hrs gliding credit.

Blinkz
The gliding credit was greatly reduced a number of years ago with regards to the JAR licence (I think when JAR was introduced), I do not know about the NPPL. It is now a minimum of 35 hours for a JAR licence and a Silver 'C'

Charlie Zulu 14th May 2005 13:12

My CAA PPL(A) was completed in 75 Hours including about 20 Hours PIC (lots of Solo circuits whilst waiting for decent cross country weather).

Then it took me a few more hours than most people to grasp the VFR Navigation side of flying. Well the theory was fine it was just putting it into practice!!!

Average exam results lets see (from memory so may be a little out)...

Aircraft Technical: 72%
Meteorology: 85%
Air Law: 85%
Navigation: 95%
Radiotelephony: 95%
Human Factors: 95%

Umm so that gives me an average of 87%

Pass mark for PPL exams eight years ago in the CAA days was 70%.

Piltdown Man 15th May 2005 09:33

As somebody has asked, 16 hours for what was called a PPL (1987?) God knows what it is called now. Can remember first lessons, I was a lot happier when the engine was not working - I knew where I was then!

Great fun hiring planes with less than 40 hours in your book.

G-ANDY 15th May 2005 16:34

What...........you need a license???

Ha ha, just joking! 45 hours and a minute!

airborne_artist 17th May 2005 09:17

I met a guy a few years back who had an RAF Flying Scholarship back in about 1955. The scholarship was for 30 hours, as that was then the PPL min req. He got the PPL on the button, and aged 17 and 5 weeks was the youngest ever UK PPL holder for a while.

jsf 18th May 2005 16:37

Whirlygig


I could tell you my average but, as a girl, I don't have a willy to wave.

Fantastic comment!


jsf

Leezyjet 25th May 2005 00:10

Just done mine in April.

42 hours on the dot, passed in 19 days (15 flying, 4 ground school).

Didn't feel confident though from passing in such a short time, but went on one of Irv Lee's seminar days last Friday which has given me a much needed confidence boost although he did say that alot of new PPL's don't feel confident and that they have somehow cheated the system to pass.

:cool:


All times are GMT. The time now is 14:23.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.