brien23
Cleared for Takeoff
New price for DPE PPL $900. and $600. for retest, local DPE just raised price and still has long waiting time to schedule. What are other DPE charging for a PPL ride?
Artificial demand is also created when 30% of applicants need at least one retest.When the FAA artificially limits supply, it creates artificial demand.
Do you have statistics to support there currently is a 30% first time failure rate? My observation is the DPEs are passing applicants they shouldn’t.Artificial demand is also created when 30% of applicants need at least one retest.
Not beyond mine and a couple of DPEs who have chimed into conversations with similar rates.Do you have statistics to support there currently is a 30% first time failure rate? My observation is the DPEs are passing applicants they shouldn’t.
The demand isn't artificial, it's real.$600-$900. When the FAA artificially limits supply, it creates artificial demand.
Surprisingly the FAA set the price of the written knowledge tests when the single vendor contract was awarded.
Exactly right for me, scheduled to fly 3 days a week at the end right before the PPL checkride in school planes. I think was 500 for a PPL check ride in 2016?And my reminder that students need to be told, early and up honestly, to save up for that checkride. It isn't just the DPE, it's also the plane rental and the push at the end. Those last few weeks can get really expensive, especially if you find out the DPE schedule isn't going to work out for a while and you need additional flights to stay sharp.
A 30% bust rate isn’t “all kinds of things can happen that would cause a candidate not to pass.”How is that "artificial" demand? That would seem to be a natural part of the market, not a manufactured distortion.
In all seriousness, do we want DPEs who give rubber-stamp approval to everyone who signs up for a checkride? Granted, the instructors should be sending people who are capable and prepared, but all kinds of things can happen that would cause a candidate not to pass, lots of which aren't the result of being unprepared or incapable.
Please elaborate. In my experience the whole purpose of the PP checkride is to determine if a candidate is prepared and capable. Seems to me other factors would lead to a deferral, not a disapproval. The odd legitimate "he was out to get me" bust, if there is such a thing, doesn't begin to explain a 25% disapproval rate....all kinds of things can happen that would cause a candidate not to pass, lots of which aren't the result of being unprepared or incapable.
I agree. I’m not going to say there’s a bad egg or two out there that just want to dig until they find something to bust the applicant on, but I’m highly confident that just about every examiner WANTS to pass their applicant. If you fail, it’s not because of the examiner most times.Please elaborate. In my experience the whole purpose of the PP checkride is to determine if a candidate is prepared and capable. Seems to me other factors would lead to a deferral, not a disapproval. The odd legitimate "he was out to get me" bust, if there is such a thing, doesn't begin to explain a 25% disapproval rate.
Nauga,
and a check in the box
For PPL, the majority have never done a checkride. Simply not knowing the process accounts for some "busted" rides, and nervousness about the process overall would account for even more.
If you think that 26% is too high, what do you think it should be, and what is your basis?
So where I work, at the ATP level, how would you justify a 30% bust rate with this pattern?Look at the data above. The PPL checkrides have a 74% pass rate, commercial 79% and ATP 91%. The more checkrides you've done, the better your chances of passing...which is not an unexpected pattern.
For PPL, the majority have never done a checkride. Simply not knowing the process accounts for some "busted" rides, and nervousness about the process overall would account for even more.
I would consider 10% to be above any legitimate failure rate due to those factors. At the ATP level, 3-5% should raise flags.If you think that 26% is too high, what do you think it should be, and what is your basis? Keep in mind the number of YouTube videos we see of people who dont appear to have learned much in their training, yet they somehow passed a checkride...would that indicate a process that is too strict, or too lenient?
Becoming a DPE
Currently I'm about to take my instrument checkride here in the next few weeks or so. The DPE who I am using is charging over $1000 for an instrument checkride. I've long believed DPEs are out there to extort as much money as they can from students and is a really crooked business. I was...www.pilotsofamerica.com
One of the problems most instructors are new and by the time they know what they are doing they leave for the airlines.I do think 26% is too high, and if it's due to the student not knowing the process or being too nervous, I lay that on the CFIs and schools. It's their job to make sure you understand the process and have a high probability of passing before endorsing you. When the CFI signs the endorsement, he should be saying, in effect, "You've already passed the checkride with me; all we're doing is asking the government to confirm it."
If a school has a fourth of the their students unable to pass the checkride at the end of training, the school is doing a poor job and is endorsing people who aren't really ready. I wouldn't train at a school that had a 26% failure rate for PPs. What do I think the passing rate should be? Well, when I was looking for a flight school, I asked schools what percentage of their students passed the checkride on the first attempt, and I wanted to hear at least 90%.
Bluntly, your instructor should be preparing you for a checkride with any DPE.Bluntly, I’m not sure that my instructor knows what the local DPEs are looking for
One of the problems most instructors are new and by the time they know what they are doing they leave for the airlines.
In the larger markets, there is a lot of turnover in CFIs. As noted above, many (most?) are newly minted CFIs who intend to jump into a ATP seat as soon as they collect enough hours.
This year has been rough for me, pass rate is down, people still showing up to the test unqualified or with an airplane that won't pass preflight.
Because the CFI applicants have figured out how to peak on checkride day and then rapidly regress?If the problem were unpreparedness of candidates, shouldn’t the faa remediate that somehow? Seems like an easy problem to solve. Somehow I end up back at the DPE though. Why are they passing cfis that send them pp that aren’t prepared?
Many of the instructors that are "repeat offenders" with unqualified applicants or airplanes...took their checkrides decades ago
So that implies it is NOT instructors just building hours for airlines.Many of the instructors that are "repeat offenders" with unqualified applicants or airplanes...took their checkrides decades ago
Interesting point of view. The CFI practical is a cup cake ride compared decades ago. It the newbies I see as the unqualified driving the flunk rates.Many of the instructors that are "repeat offenders" with unqualified applicants or airplanes...took their checkrides decades ago
I don't see how being a "repeat offender" is related to the date of check ride.Many of the instructors that are "repeat offenders" with unqualified applicants or airplanes...took their checkrides decades ago