FLYING LESSONS for November 27, 2025

Topic this week include: >> Proficient and safe >> Know enough to know better >> The beginning of wisdom

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This week’s LESSONS

Lots of great discussion resulted from last week’s LESSONS…beginning with, but going beyond, just multiengine operations to teach LESSONS to us all. Let’s go to the Debrief.

Questions? Comments? Supportable opinions? Let us know at [email protected]

Debrief

Readers write about recent LESSONS

Reader Kynan Sturgess writes about last week’s LESSONS:

Flying lore is filled with stories of pilots who soloed with very little instructional time. In my first attempt at learning to fly (before running out of money at eight hours total time) I was disappointed and a little surprised when I passed seven hours and my instructor hadn’t signed me off for solo. I’ve heard as low as 3.5 hours, and seven to 10 seemed to be the norm (at least among those I’d read about); I didn’t know enough to know better. 

Such a low-time student may well be marginally prepared to take off, fly a pattern and land the traditional three times. But how ready is that student for an engine failure, or a collision threat, or some other abnormal condition or emergency?

Later, when I was an instructor myself, the U.S. FAA amended Part 61 of the regulations to require a student pilot to “[demonstrate] satisfactory proficiency and safety” on a list of 15 tasks and maneuvers (14 CFR 61.87d). The student doesn’t have to perform each to checkride completion standards, but the student must receive and log instruction in the entire list and show that they can show to the instructor’s satisfaction that he or she can perform each task or maneuver safely. Completing the full task list and earning that assurance of safety almost certainly requires more time than seemed to be the norm in days gone by. The substitution of complex avionics and slick, fast airframes for the simple trainers of old adds further to the average time to first solo, now estimated as 15 to 20 hours on average.

Why do I believe this is relevant in response to reader Kynan’s comments about multiengine training? 

To earn a multiengine rating you must pass a Practical Test. There is no minimum amount for instruction or flying time required. Coincidentally, Appendix 1 (page 72) to the Private Pilot – Airplane Airman Certificate Standards (ACS) identifies 15 Tasks a candidate must complete to earn the Multiengine rating to an existing pilot certificate. Unlike first solo there is no knowledge test (“written” exam) required for the multiengine rating. Now, I don’t diminish the achievement for passing the Practical Test. Pilots must perform to precise standards to earn the rating. But given the safety limitations built into multiengine training and the inability to replicate the worst-case scenario of high-power engine failure at low airspeeds close to the ground, isn’t meeting the minimum standards of the ACS somewhat analogous to “proficiently and safely” flying a first solo? Is there more you must do to truly be safe and ready to correctly respond to engine failure in a worst-case scenario?

There’s no shame in needing more time than others to be ready for a Practical Test. There’s great honor in recognizing your need more practice before taking the exam. Unlike my presolo expectations, you know enough to know better. If you decide that means modifying your goal, then that’s a good, data-driven result for you. Thanks for sharing your risk management decision, Kynan.   

Reader, author and well-known advanced single-pilot airplane instructor Brian Sagi adds:

I agree: there is often a disconnect between what we train and evaluate and the scenarios that often result in real-world accidents. My experience mirrors yours in that there is also often a lack of understanding—not teaching the why—that results in many checkride maneuvers being presented as what I call “checkride circus tricks”: learning a maneuver in order to demonstrate the ability to fly that maneuver, instead of learning a maneuver with an understanding not only of how to fly it for the Practical Test, but when and how the LESSONS of each maneuver apply to normal, abnormal and emergency operations long after the checkride is complete.

“The Drill” (I was taught that term when I earned my multiengine rating in 1990, and it appears to go back to World War II U.S. military instruction) is a succinct method of remembering the “bold print” or memorized immediate action items required upon detecting loss of thrust. It is a memory technique for executing the checklist. I believe the failure you describe with post-rating multiengine checkouts is not in “the drill” itself, but how it is taught and evaluated. That’s meant as a critique of much civilian flight training as a whole, not the instructors and evaluators associated with that particular flying club alone. 

For all of us, not just the twin crowd, think about:

  • How and why we perform actions on normal, abnormal and emergency checklists.
  • What happens next after each checklist is complete. Finishing one checklist often triggers the beginning of another, such as Engine Failure in Flight can create a need for the Maximum Glide checklist, or the Emergency Descent checklist—triggering an entering argument as I discussed last week. 
  • Checklists and procedures, meeting presolo requirements and Practical Test standards, are not the end goal. They are merely the beginning of wisdom.  

More to say? Let us learn from you, at [email protected]

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Happy Thanksgiving to my U.S. readers, and safe and enjoyable flights to readers around the world.

Thomas P. Turner, M.S. Aviation Safety 

Flight Instructor Hall of Fame Inductee

2021 Jack Eggspuehler Service Award winner

2010 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year 

2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the Year

FLYING LESSONS is ©2025 Mastery Flight Training, Inc.  For more information see www.thomaspturner.com. For reprint permission or other questions contact [email protected].  

Disclaimer

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances. In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. Apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.

Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence. You are pilot in command, and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.