Pilot training in the UK
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Pilot training in the UK
Dear All,
I am very new to the idea of possessing a flying license and I have a few general questions:
1. What is the rough cost of the whole training in the London area (including books, studies, flying, exams etc.)?
2. Which flight school would be the best, and possibly closest to London?
3. Considering you get you regular, basic license, what planes are you allowed to fly? are there any regulations restricting your distance/passenger carrying or any other domain?
Thank you very much in advance for all your help and I am really sorry for potential repetition of certain topics already present on this forum.
I am very new to the idea of possessing a flying license and I have a few general questions:
1. What is the rough cost of the whole training in the London area (including books, studies, flying, exams etc.)?
2. Which flight school would be the best, and possibly closest to London?
3. Considering you get you regular, basic license, what planes are you allowed to fly? are there any regulations restricting your distance/passenger carrying or any other domain?
Thank you very much in advance for all your help and I am really sorry for potential repetition of certain topics already present on this forum.
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Have a look here for some of your answers:
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...train-ppl.html
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...-scotland.html
Cost wise, you are recommended not to pay up front, as schools have a habit of going bust, taking your money with them, no matter how good they look. Some of the "all in" packages offered also only include the bare minimum and don't include exams or landing fees at other air fields. If you do an intensive course, you learn quickly and you have a natural aptitude, you might make in the in the minimum time (45 hours flying time for PPL). Most people don't, and so have to continue to pay the additional cost of lessons. Cost is probably around £7000 - but there are a huge number of variables.
Location - you have the joys of the Olympics which is restricting much of London's airspace which will make things harder this summer. There are lots of training schools around from what I hear, but being up north, I can't recommend any. Google is your friend. Pick a place you can get to easily, as with the UK weather, and planes going "tech", there will be lots of days you get to the airport and can't fly. Also try and get trial lessons at a few, to see which suits you. I suggest selecting a few, then asking more specific questions here.
A PPL with a SEP rating, allows you to fly, not for profit, a single-piston-engined, non-turbocharged, fixed-pitch propeller, fixed tricycle gear, non-pressurised land aeroplanes (with a few exceptions), during the day, in good visibility and within sight of the ground (in UK). There are few of these aircraft which have more than 4 seats. See Pilot licensing in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia for a summary of different licence options.
If you get a UK PPL, you can fly a UK registered plane in any country in the world pretty much.
Good luck - happy future flying!
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...train-ppl.html
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...-scotland.html
Cost wise, you are recommended not to pay up front, as schools have a habit of going bust, taking your money with them, no matter how good they look. Some of the "all in" packages offered also only include the bare minimum and don't include exams or landing fees at other air fields. If you do an intensive course, you learn quickly and you have a natural aptitude, you might make in the in the minimum time (45 hours flying time for PPL). Most people don't, and so have to continue to pay the additional cost of lessons. Cost is probably around £7000 - but there are a huge number of variables.
Location - you have the joys of the Olympics which is restricting much of London's airspace which will make things harder this summer. There are lots of training schools around from what I hear, but being up north, I can't recommend any. Google is your friend. Pick a place you can get to easily, as with the UK weather, and planes going "tech", there will be lots of days you get to the airport and can't fly. Also try and get trial lessons at a few, to see which suits you. I suggest selecting a few, then asking more specific questions here.
A PPL with a SEP rating, allows you to fly, not for profit, a single-piston-engined, non-turbocharged, fixed-pitch propeller, fixed tricycle gear, non-pressurised land aeroplanes (with a few exceptions), during the day, in good visibility and within sight of the ground (in UK). There are few of these aircraft which have more than 4 seats. See Pilot licensing in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia for a summary of different licence options.
If you get a UK PPL, you can fly a UK registered plane in any country in the world pretty much.
Good luck - happy future flying!
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and I meant to say- the flyer forums are often better for general PPL student chat unless you've got a specific question - although there are a few of us student PPLs who hang around here and are tolerated...
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Hey, thanks very much for an extensive answer mate, really appreciate it. Just a couple more questions which popped into my head:
1. If I wanna fy at night, do I need to have another license?
2. If I am a EU citizen, but not British born, can I still do the license in the UK?
3. Which airports/aeroclubs tend to be the best?
4. Is there any particular difference between machines you learn to fly on? I mean, is Cessna very different from others?
BTW, any good schools around London you might have heard about? Which airports/aeroclubs are best in the country?
THanks again in advance for your comments.
1. If I wanna fy at night, do I need to have another license?
2. If I am a EU citizen, but not British born, can I still do the license in the UK?
3. Which airports/aeroclubs tend to be the best?
4. Is there any particular difference between machines you learn to fly on? I mean, is Cessna very different from others?
BTW, any good schools around London you might have heard about? Which airports/aeroclubs are best in the country?
THanks again in advance for your comments.
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Fly at night - you need a night rating. About 5 hours instruction...
Nationality - doesn't matter in the UK.
Location - I can't answer for London - I'm learning in Scotland - which is great but a bit of a commute...
Which plane to learn on - everyone has favourites but I wouldn't worry too much about which one unless you are very large. There are advantages and disadvantages of pretty much every plane going, but most people learn on PA28s or Cessna 152s. Nothing wrong with either of them. I'm learning in a SA Bulldog though - much nicer plane!
Nationality - doesn't matter in the UK.
Location - I can't answer for London - I'm learning in Scotland - which is great but a bit of a commute...
Which plane to learn on - everyone has favourites but I wouldn't worry too much about which one unless you are very large. There are advantages and disadvantages of pretty much every plane going, but most people learn on PA28s or Cessna 152s. Nothing wrong with either of them. I'm learning in a SA Bulldog though - much nicer plane!
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How much does it cost to get a licence might be the wrong question, depending on what you want the licence for.
If you just want to get the licence, tick the box, and then move on to the next thing on your list, be it cave diving or stock car racing or whatever, then it's the right question.
But if you want to carry on flying after getting the licence you may also wish to ask how much it costs to keep a licence, which is a much more complicated question with many different possible answers. And this could be more difficult - for some people adding £7k or £9k to their mortgage to fund the course as a one off is no big deal, particularly with today's interest rates, but finding £3k per year each and every year afterwards to keep flying is more difficult.
If you just want to get the licence, tick the box, and then move on to the next thing on your list, be it cave diving or stock car racing or whatever, then it's the right question.
But if you want to carry on flying after getting the licence you may also wish to ask how much it costs to keep a licence, which is a much more complicated question with many different possible answers. And this could be more difficult - for some people adding £7k or £9k to their mortgage to fund the course as a one off is no big deal, particularly with today's interest rates, but finding £3k per year each and every year afterwards to keep flying is more difficult.
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London flying establishments
Hi bober02,
London is a huge place and is ringed with flying establishments, most of them pretty good.
Tell us roughly what part of London are you based in and then we can tell you which flying establishments are likely to be the best ones in your sector.
Regards,
BP.
London is a huge place and is ringed with flying establishments, most of them pretty good.
Tell us roughly what part of London are you based in and then we can tell you which flying establishments are likely to be the best ones in your sector.
Regards,
BP.
Which flight school would be the best, and possibly closest to London?
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Well, I must say you guys are amazing in terms of speed and depth of your answers.
In reply, I would firstly like to say that 3k per year is a small cost, roughly what I would need to pay for keeping a good car in London.
With regards to my location, schools etc. I am staying in Battersea area of London, south from Chelsea. I checked a few local aeroclubs, one in Luton, at Cranfield, one in Brighton (which costs about 8k) and they all look pretty similar. They tend to have different planes though. Any advice where to have a look?
In reply, I would firstly like to say that 3k per year is a small cost, roughly what I would need to pay for keeping a good car in London.
With regards to my location, schools etc. I am staying in Battersea area of London, south from Chelsea. I checked a few local aeroclubs, one in Luton, at Cranfield, one in Brighton (which costs about 8k) and they all look pretty similar. They tend to have different planes though. Any advice where to have a look?
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Have a look around, ask a few questions to resident instructors or PPL's milling around and see what one works out best in terms of location, and your inner sense.
I fly from Panshanger, near Welwyn Garden City, it is has a nice informal club atmosphere, the training is thorough, it has a fairly long grass runway and a number of PA28 low wing aircraft. When I was looking around for my PPL, one of their engineers took the trouble to take me out to an aircraft and explain a few things to me. I liked that, and immediately booked up my first lesson in the following week.
You also have to think about what you want to do when you have passed. E.g. is the location suitable for your kind of touring; do they have other planes (e.g. complex, aerobatic or tail wheel aircraft) you might fancy extending your license too; do they have night training or some kind of instrument training facilities; is the food any good etc...
I fly from Panshanger, near Welwyn Garden City, it is has a nice informal club atmosphere, the training is thorough, it has a fairly long grass runway and a number of PA28 low wing aircraft. When I was looking around for my PPL, one of their engineers took the trouble to take me out to an aircraft and explain a few things to me. I liked that, and immediately booked up my first lesson in the following week.
You also have to think about what you want to do when you have passed. E.g. is the location suitable for your kind of touring; do they have other planes (e.g. complex, aerobatic or tail wheel aircraft) you might fancy extending your license too; do they have night training or some kind of instrument training facilities; is the food any good etc...
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4. Is there any particular difference between machines you learn to fly on? I mean, is Cessna very different from others?
Having said that, from a pilot perspective the flying characteristics between the two most common training aircraft (PA28 Piper Warrior and Cessna 172) are pretty much the same. Cockpit layout, the way the systems are setup and controlled, are all pretty much the same too. Once you have your license, all that's typically required is a browse through the POH (Pilots Operating Handbook) and an hour checkout flight and you're good to go. Legally speaking you don't even need the one-hour checkout, but you do need to be familiar with certain bits of information contained in the POH.
The same applies for performance. The far majority of the rental fleet is based on a 160 HP engine, burns about 8.8 USG of avgas per hour, and cruises around 100 knots. They can carry four adults with half fuel (about 2.5 hours endurance) or three adults with full fuel (about 4.5 hours endurance).
So the only real difference between a Cessna and a Piper (or Robin, or Bulldog, or whatever) is the view. A Cessna is great for sightseeing as the wings are not in the way of looking downward. But your head is essentially in the wing, so the view sideways and up is severely restricted. Low wings are better for looking sideways and up, but if you look down the wing is in the way.
So to a very large extent the choice of aircraft comes down to preference and availability. It's a good idea to stick to one aircraft type during training, but once you have your PPL it's very common to get checked out on a number of other types, so you have a choice based on availability, preference and mission.
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I'm currently flying out of Cranfield with the Azure flying club, and it seems like a good place to me
Its also just outside the olympic restrictions ![Big Grin](https://www.pprune.org/images/smilies2/eusa_clap.gif)
If its on your list of possibilities you might want to read this recent thread:
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...d-airport.html
W
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![Big Grin](https://www.pprune.org/images/smilies2/eusa_clap.gif)
If its on your list of possibilities you might want to read this recent thread:
http://www.pprune.org/private-flying...d-airport.html
W
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Fly at night - you need a night rating. About 5 hours instruction...
Good news is you can do most of (if not all) of it within your minumum number of training hours for the PPL.
That said, however , it is unusual to qualify in UK in the minimum number of hours, best to budget plus 10-20% in costs for your PPL.
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Hi Bober, and welcome to the student pilot clan!
Like the comment riverrock, and tolerated is just about right!
But Flyer Forum is great for we studes, I use it more than PPrune these days for my questions which probably seem daft to the experienced pilot!.
Can't really help you much with clubs around S London (Biggin Hill, I think that may have some? Although have you contacted the RAF Flying Club at Halton? Grass strip (I prefer concrete!!) But much cheaper than a civilian flying club/school. But as to aircraft. Yes it does seem to be personal choice, but I wouldn't want to fly in anything other than a low wing type now.
Anyway, good luck and welcome to the hours of pleasure and frustration (and cursing the weather as I was doing today!!)
and I meant to say- the flyer forums are often better for general PPL student chat unless you've got a specific question - although there are a few of us student PPLs who hang around here and are tolerated...
![Wink](https://www.pprune.org/images/smilies/wink2.gif)
Can't really help you much with clubs around S London (Biggin Hill, I think that may have some? Although have you contacted the RAF Flying Club at Halton? Grass strip (I prefer concrete!!) But much cheaper than a civilian flying club/school. But as to aircraft. Yes it does seem to be personal choice, but I wouldn't want to fly in anything other than a low wing type now.
Anyway, good luck and welcome to the hours of pleasure and frustration (and cursing the weather as I was doing today!!)
The other questions are how quickly you want to do it, and how you'll fit the study in with the rest of your life.
If you can take the time out to do an intensive course, (or even to do part of the course intensively) then you will progress much faster. I speak from experience having drawn my hang-gliding lessons out over many years, and having done my PPL in about 2 months. Progress can be very slow if you're having a lesson a month, and that gets cancelled 1/3 of the time due to weather or aircraft serviceability.
There's also quite a lot of bookwork to get through - none of it particularly hard, but reasonably time consuming and quite rewarding.
If you can take the time out to do an intensive course, (or even to do part of the course intensively) then you will progress much faster. I speak from experience having drawn my hang-gliding lessons out over many years, and having done my PPL in about 2 months. Progress can be very slow if you're having a lesson a month, and that gets cancelled 1/3 of the time due to weather or aircraft serviceability.
There's also quite a lot of bookwork to get through - none of it particularly hard, but reasonably time consuming and quite rewarding.
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Thanks again for your helpful comments.
If I decide to do my license I will probably aim for 2 hours a week, that is the maximum I would be able to do (maybe 3 if I am allowed to fly for 3 hours straight). That should be pretty intensive course, isn't is?
Thanks for link to cranfield airport, really appreciate it. Anyone knows any other places/aeroclubs in the proximity of 50 miles from central London?
If I decide to do my license I will probably aim for 2 hours a week, that is the maximum I would be able to do (maybe 3 if I am allowed to fly for 3 hours straight). That should be pretty intensive course, isn't is?
Thanks for link to cranfield airport, really appreciate it. Anyone knows any other places/aeroclubs in the proximity of 50 miles from central London?
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An intensive course is more like 4-5 weeks, with flying 1/2/3 hours a day, probably in 2x or 3x 1 hour sessions (which people tend to do in the US, but lets not get into the usual pros/cons of that plan here).
Be cautious about trying to do 2 hour lessons - 3 will likely be a non-starter (your instructor will need to pee occasionally!).
When you're first starting out, 2 hour lessons will leave you knackered and overloaded - you likely won't get much value out of the 2nd hour.
2 hour bashes around the circuit likewise will leave you shattered.
If you really wanted to do 2 hours, you'd likely do 1 hour, wait a couple of hours and fly the next hour. You'd likely be better served by doing 1 hour, twice per week, rather than on the same day (would also give you some redundancy as you can expect to have a decent proportion of lessons cancelled due to weather).
Be cautious about trying to do 2 hour lessons - 3 will likely be a non-starter (your instructor will need to pee occasionally!).
When you're first starting out, 2 hour lessons will leave you knackered and overloaded - you likely won't get much value out of the 2nd hour.
2 hour bashes around the circuit likewise will leave you shattered.
If you really wanted to do 2 hours, you'd likely do 1 hour, wait a couple of hours and fly the next hour. You'd likely be better served by doing 1 hour, twice per week, rather than on the same day (would also give you some redundancy as you can expect to have a decent proportion of lessons cancelled due to weather).
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The best is two 1-hour flights per day.
That way you build currency rapidly, and pass the test easily first time, after the minimum time.
But, doing a PPL near one's home, in the UK, nobody does that, for obvious reasons. You fit the training into your life. Then it takes a year, usually.
My son is having one lesson a week until his GCSEs are done and then I will let him have one a day.
That way you build currency rapidly, and pass the test easily first time, after the minimum time.
But, doing a PPL near one's home, in the UK, nobody does that, for obvious reasons. You fit the training into your life. Then it takes a year, usually.
My son is having one lesson a week until his GCSEs are done and then I will let him have one a day.
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Firstly, an hours flying lesson is not just an hour. You'll have preflight briefings and you'll be expected to check the plane and stuff. After landing if you don't have a formal debrief you're going to want to have a chat to your instructor about what you've done and what to read up on next. That's not taking in to consideration travelling to and from the place of training. Example, my last lesson was at 13:30, I'm fortunate to live 10 mins from Southend airport, so I left home at 12:45 and got back in at 15:30. True that involved some chatting and not a lot of rushing about on my part but if you're planning on turning up and leaving just over an hour later then you'll not only be disappointed but I think you'll find it difficult to learn.
When abgd mentions intensive training, I think the reference is to learning in blocks rather than longer individual lessons. For instance, it is possible to take a four week course in Florida where you live and breath flying. The weather makes that set up more difficult in the uk. No need to go into that as a search of the forum will give you more details if that suits your personal time and money situation.
One thing is certain is that in th beginning, you'll be hard pushed to do 2-3 hours at once as it's mentally exhausting and I feel it would be counter productive to your learning. As you progress, having two lessons in one day with a break in between can be worth considering.
When abgd mentions intensive training, I think the reference is to learning in blocks rather than longer individual lessons. For instance, it is possible to take a four week course in Florida where you live and breath flying. The weather makes that set up more difficult in the uk. No need to go into that as a search of the forum will give you more details if that suits your personal time and money situation.
One thing is certain is that in th beginning, you'll be hard pushed to do 2-3 hours at once as it's mentally exhausting and I feel it would be counter productive to your learning. As you progress, having two lessons in one day with a break in between can be worth considering.
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