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Upgrading Yourself: Make a Training Plan

Going for another rating or an endorsement or buying a plane and need a checkout? Do some homework first and save money and time during training.

Stepping up to high-performance, complex pressurized singles and twins means learning and mastering new and often complicated systems, including dealing with system failures. Here instructor Nicole Blackmore (right) goes over the nosegear strut and retraction system of a Cessna 340 with CFI student Cali Iacolucci.

Some of the more interesting conversations we have with pilots are how best to get the training required for an upgrade in their pilot skills and/or privileges.  Whether it is a new pilot certificate or rating or an endorsement to fly tailwheel or high-performance airplanes, it’s almost invariably going to be an expensive proposition and will require a serious investment of time and effort. The question is how best to go through the process without going broke and with a minimum of problems and distractions.

We’ll look at the matter of upgrading our pilot skills while getting something tangible to show for it in the context of acquiring an endorsement to be allowed to fly as PIC in an airplane we are otherwise rated to fly, adding a rating and getting an appropriate checkout to fly a new-to-you airplane that you’ve purchased.

Rick Durden

Senior Editor Rick Durden has written for Aviation Consumer since 1994 and specializes in aviation law. Rick is an active CFII and holds an ATP with type ratings in the Douglas DC-3 and Cessna Citation. He is the author of The Thinking Pilot’s Flight Manual or, How to Survive Flying Little Airplanes and Have a Ball Doing It, Vols. 1 & 2.