I disagree with the instructor being the better pilot. Not always the case but as far as 702/703 skills the guy who has been flying to all kinds of different areas and airports in many different types of terrain will have developed decision making skills and flying skills that are not gained flying around the circuit for hours every day.5x5 wrote:PilotDAR, I realize it's your own opinion but my opinion certainly differs. I certainly do feel the last two comments in your summary are simply incorrect.
Any CFI worth the position will be extremely impressed by any new Class 4 that displays a good attitude and willingness to learn.PilotDar wrote:On the other hand, the new instructor must compete with many other pilots for that job, and doing it well is a little more difficult to impress the boss with, though still possible.
Depending how you define fast, a new instructor will accumulate hours much more rapidly than almost any new pilot flying their own airplane. And if you take the average instructor with 300 hours instructing and the average new pilot with 300 hours of their own recreational flying, in almost all cases the instructor will be the better pilot.PilotDAR wrote:The experience you gain in the role of instructor, though flying, won't make you a well rounded pilot as fast as getting out on your own, on your own initiative, making and correcting your own mistakes, in different flying environments.
*edited to correct the Forum's incorrect quote attribution
I personally am of the opinion that 200 hour pilots should not become instructors unless they intend to instruct as a career, not just a stepping stone.



