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The Instrument Rating - “Flying in the Clouds”. Why get an Instrument Rating? To fly in Instrument Meterological Conditions (IMC) or under Instrument.

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Presentation on theme: "The Instrument Rating - “Flying in the Clouds”. Why get an Instrument Rating? To fly in Instrument Meterological Conditions (IMC) or under Instrument."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Instrument Rating - “Flying in the Clouds”

2 Why get an Instrument Rating? To fly in Instrument Meterological Conditions (IMC) or under Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) To fly for hire > 50 miles & at night To fly above 18,000 feet.

3 Obtaining your Instrument Rating Must have at least 50 hours cross-country PIC Obtain 40 hours of simulated or actual instrument time with: – 15 hours dual – One 250 NM cross- country under IFR – Up to 20 hours in an FAA approved simulator Knowledge Test Practical Test

4 Cost of an Instrument Rating Piper Warrior: – 40 hours @ $115/hr = $4600 – 15 hours dual @ $50/hr = $750 – FAA Knowledge test = $80 – Practical test = $300 – Books & Supplies ~ $6000

5 How Instrument Flying Works


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