Cat Driver wrote:My,my , my the same two people are still not getting it right.
Fact you Big Pistons Forever should at least know what you are talking about before you make a fool of yourself by posting something that is wrong. For your information when I got my PPL in 1953 the minimum time for the PPL was thirty hours and the government gave us back $150.00 for getting the license. Like many of the students during that time I got my PPL in the minimum time, 30 hours.
Fact: The average PPL was not done in 30 hrs, 50 yrs ago it was about 45 hrs.
This is what I said:Fact : The average PPL does not take 100 hrs today it is about 66 hrs.
to the mind boggling situation we find ourselves in today. Where a student finally gets their PPL with maybe 100 hours of training
You of course can deny that there are cases where they take that long.....did you read the post by Tizz in the flight training forum today?
I did not say the average was 30 hours, I said they were turning out PPL's in 30 hours. You can rant all you want about my attitude but it does not change the fact that the quality of flight instruction in many schools is below par.
Car Driver:
The flight training stats say 50 yrs ago the average PPL too 45 hrs or 50% more hours than the Dept of Transport minimum hour requirement. So if the average is so much higher than the minimum than the inescapable conclusion is that not very many PPL's were being done in 30 hrs.
Don't you just hate it when the facts get in the way of your prejudices....
Oh and guess what, today it still on average takes about 50% longer than the fed minimums to get a PPL.
I guess the good news from yout point of view is the instructors from your era must have been the same quality as the "200hr wonders", "Fu*king morons" ,"imbicles"
and "stupid" flight instructors of today.
Damn and here I vowed to keep my posts upbeat and positive...Oh wait I made a special exception for you Cat Driver





