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  1. #11
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    Page/Lake Powell, Arizona USA
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    Don't know about flight schools, but most trade schools in the U.S. qualify for student loans. No one shows up with cash. Just visit the schools you are interested in. When you pick one tell them you need a student loan (like almost all other students), they'll walk you to their financial aid office and they'll help you with the forms.

    You don't have to start paying on the loan until six months after graduation.

    Not sure about pilots, but many doctors, nurses, and other fields can sign up with AmeriCorps (?) work in rural areas for a couple years and have their student loans forgiven. I know we have lots of medical chopper pilots here in Page forever ferrying the injured in from the rez and remote highway collisions and air evacing out to the big hospitals down in Flagstaff and Phoenix.

    As far as helicopters, once back in about 1964 when I was an eager Marine Option NROTC dude the Marines flew a bunch of us down to Camp Pendleton and San Diego to show us around. A friend and I visited my late uncle on Coronado. He was a long time Naval Aviator going back to War II. My friend was gung-ho choppers. Uncle Larry quietly told him about how back when U.S. Forces were in the Congo...well, they really weren't officially, but they were...but they weren't...but one chopper that was got shot down by a dart from a blowgun. The dart apparently hit an exposed oil line, the oil drained, the rotor froze and the chopper became a rock.

    Figure they probably protect vulnerable areas of choppers better these days, but its something you might want to think about....and of course the Military trains chopper pilots. Think there are a few on this board. You might wanna ask Steve Ashton too. Think he's one of them.

    Ron
    Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
    Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
    "I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."

  2. #12
    Join Date
    1st November 07
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    As riverkilt says, choppers are inherently more dangerous.
    Turn the engine on in a aeroplane, and the thing just wants to fly,
    Turn the engine on in a helicopter, and the thing just wants to fly apart.

    But then, its a trade off, in your chopper you can go anywhere hover and land where you please! (having said that, there are planes that can do just about the same!)

  3. #13
    Join Date
    30th August 05
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    Take a look at

    http://www.coasthelicoptercollege.com
    http://www.bchelicopters.com
    http://www.chinookhelicopters.com

    These are all good schools, with good instructors and reputations. All have mountains and wilderness nearby for training in real world commercial scenarios.

    Coast Helicopter College is based at Victoria International Airport (not far from Freedom Kilts!), and the others at Abbotsford International Airport. Both airports have a mix of international commercial traffic and thus provide good training in busy airport operations.

    Mostly the US and Canadian training will be very similar. There is one facet in which these Canadian schools differ from many, but by no means all, US schools. In Canada is not common to be trained by lower time instructors, whereas at many US schools this is the norm. Most instructors in Canada are very experienced commercial pilots who train students in the quieter winter/spring period. Thus Canadian schools often run just two main commercial courses per year -- Sep to Dec, and Jan to Apr.

    KP

  4. #14
    Join Date
    12th September 07
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    Goose Creek, SC
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    Quote Originally Posted by KiltedPilot View Post
    Take a look at

    http://www.coasthelicoptercollege.com
    http://www.bchelicopters.com
    http://www.chinookhelicopters.com

    These are all good schools, with good instructors and reputations. All have mountains and wilderness nearby for training in real world commercial scenarios.

    Coast Helicopter College is based at Victoria International Airport (not far from Freedom Kilts!), and the others at Abbotsford International Airport. Both airports have a mix of international commercial traffic and thus provide good training in busy airport operations.

    Mostly the US and Canadian training will be very similar. There is one facet in which these Canadian schools differ from many, but by no means all, US schools. In Canada is not common to be trained by lower time instructors, whereas at many US schools this is the norm. Most instructors in Canada are very experienced commercial pilots who train students in the quieter winter/spring period. Thus Canadian schools often run just two main commercial courses per year -- Sep to Dec, and Jan to Apr.

    KP
    Great links. Thanks! I was browsing through there and noticed that several of the schools said that they were eligible for government financial aid. Thats great but how does that work with me being a U.S. resident and all?

    BB

  5. #15
    creativeaccents
    I started flying when I was quite young and soloed as soon as I was of legal age to do so. By that time I had already flown many of the Piper and Beechcraft planes with my dad (ex Marine Air corps). Even back in the sixties and seventies there were several instances where only his experiences got us out. He always said the primary difference between instrument rated pilots and the others was that they had the knowledge to know when not to fly and the training to get out of tight spots. Even with that, there was one time when we got caught in a severe downdraft on an approach...I woke up upside down and crawled out. He had been at the controls.
    Today, the skies in the U.S. are far more congested. Whatever you may do, get the best instructor you can and don't stop your training even after you have your basic certifications. Too, plan to fly at least once a week. Learning how to recover from stalls, spins, and even the basic maneuvers for getting out of other emergency situations is well worth the practice. A near roll once saved us from a mid-air. There is a lot more to flying today than simply taking lessons for 8 to 10 hours and then going solo.

  6. #16
    Join Date
    30th August 05
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    Victoria, BC, Canada
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    Quote Originally Posted by McGurk View Post
    As riverkilt says, choppers are inherently more dangerous.
    Turn the engine on in a aeroplane, and the thing just wants to fly,
    Turn the engine on in a helicopter, and the thing just wants to fly apart.
    When I did my fixed wing (aeroplane) training, the instructors would look out of the windows and remark how dangerous helicopters where. Then, when I did my helicopter training, I was surprised how many of the helicopter instructors looked out and remarked how dangerous aeroplanes were. Huh?

    Then I started to gradually understand their viewpoint.

    An engine failure in a light aeroplane requires locating a flat field with no obstacles close to 1500' long in order to land safely. In some parts of the country this is common, but in many it's very rare. A helicopter needs a tennis court.

    I read recently that statistically a helicopter pilot is 4 times more likely than a light aeroplane pilot to walk away from an engine failure.

    An emergency might not require a forced landing, just a precautionary landing away from the airfield -- say, due to unexpected adverse weather, running out of fuel, or mechanical failure. I've never come across a fixed wing instructor who has done an off airport (i.e. off runway) landing in a typical scenario (I know some who land on beaches). In my helicopter training I did hundreds of bush landings - it was routine.

    When the wind rose, all the training aeroplanes were chained down, and their rudders locked. At the helicopter school, this was the time we practised power off landings to the ground. 25 gusting 35 was stuff of nightmares for light aeroplane pilots (many can fly slower than that, with flaps down), but it's great training weather for helicopter pilots. A great number of fixed wing accidents occur due to lose of control on landing because of wind.

    Likewise, when flying fixed wing I'd break out in a sweat if I saw low cloud, or rain, or snow, or other features that might cause me to lose visibility. In mountainous terrain this is a frequent cause of accidents for fixed wing pilots. But in a helicopter training, I often flew below low cloud, in heavy rain, and with less than a mile visibility, or down valleys obscured with cloud -- it's just so easy to stop and turn around in a helicopter, or even land and wait for it to clear.

    Helicopter are 10,000 moving parts all trying to do you harm, but when something goes wrong you often have more options to save yourself than when flying fixed wing.

    KP

  7. #17
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    30th August 05
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    Quote Originally Posted by berserkbishop View Post
    several of the schools said that they were eligible for government financial aid. That's great but how does that work with me being a U.S. resident and all?
    Flight training, for commercial purposes, typically qualifies for tax credits. You get that credit, if appropriate, from whatever jurisdiction you end up paying your subsequent taxes to, not where the flight school is.

    That training can also qualify for student loans. Again that tends to come from where you currently reside, not where you will do your training.

    Finally, in rare cases, the government will contribute towards that training via special schemes. Again, that contribution tends to come from the government where you reside, rather than the jurisdiction of the school. For instance, the oil revenue rich provincial government of Alberta will contribute towards commercial flight training in BC for Alberta residents, but the government of BC does not (beyond normal tax breaks and loans) for its residents.

    You might want to check the information pages of US flight schools which might provide hints at the tax breaks, loans, and contribution schemes that exist for US residents.

    KP

  8. #18
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    1st January 08
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    Frankly, I wouldn't learn to fly in the UK.
    I know several folk who went on from the RAF (where I served for 15 years) who went on to become commercial pilots.
    All of them went to the USA to learn. It's (at least it was at the time) cheaper and the weather is better, leading to less lost time due to weather down-time.

  9. #19
    Join Date
    12th September 07
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    Quote Originally Posted by KiltedPilot View Post
    When I did my fixed wing (aeroplane) training, the instructors would look out of the windows and remark how dangerous helicopters where. Then, when I did my helicopter training, I was surprised how many of the helicopter instructors looked out and remarked how dangerous aeroplanes were. Huh?

    Then I started to gradually understand their viewpoint.

    An engine failure in a light aeroplane requires locating a flat field with no obstacles close to 1500' long in order to land safely. In some parts of the country this is common, but in many it's very rare. A helicopter needs a tennis court.

    I read recently that statistically a helicopter pilot is 4 times more likely than a light aeroplane pilot to walk away from an engine failure.

    An emergency might not require a forced landing, just a precautionary landing away from the airfield -- say, due to unexpected adverse weather, running out of fuel, or mechanical failure. I've never come across a fixed wing instructor who has done an off airport (i.e. off runway) landing in a typical scenario (I know some who land on beaches). In my helicopter training I did hundreds of bush landings - it was routine.

    When the wind rose, all the training aeroplanes were chained down, and their rudders locked. At the helicopter school, this was the time we practised power off landings to the ground. 25 gusting 35 was stuff of nightmares for light aeroplane pilots (many can fly slower than that, with flaps down), but it's great training weather for helicopter pilots. A great number of fixed wing accidents occur due to lose of control on landing because of wind.

    Likewise, when flying fixed wing I'd break out in a sweat if I saw low cloud, or rain, or snow, or other features that might cause me to lose visibility. In mountainous terrain this is a frequent cause of accidents for fixed wing pilots. But in a helicopter training, I often flew below low cloud, in heavy rain, and with less than a mile visibility, or down valleys obscured with cloud -- it's just so easy to stop and turn around in a helicopter, or even land and wait for it to clear.

    Helicopter are 10,000 moving parts all trying to do you harm, but when something goes wrong you often have more options to save yourself than when flying fixed wing.

    KP
    That is my understanding as well. I saw a guy cut his engines in a heli and drop a thousand feet and land. (or it seemed like a thousand feet). Very cool. I do want to learn to fly both, and with my options and all I am acutally considering University of North Dakotas fixed wing flight program. I could get my Bachelors in avation, commercial pilots lisence, and then use my flight hours toward my heli lisence as well. Best part is that I can also get a large part of my training on the governments dime.

  10. #20
    Join Date
    1st November 07
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    Quote Originally Posted by KiltedPilot View Post
    When I did my fixed wing (aeroplane) training, the instructors would look out of the windows and remark how dangerous helicopters where. Then, when I did my helicopter training, I was surprised how many of the helicopter instructors looked out and remarked how dangerous aeroplanes were. Huh?

    Then I started to gradually understand their viewpoint.

    An engine failure in a light aeroplane requires locating a flat field with no obstacles close to 1500' long in order to land safely. In some parts of the country this is common, but in many it's very rare. A helicopter needs a tennis court.

    I read recently that statistically a helicopter pilot is 4 times more likely than a light aeroplane pilot to walk away from an engine failure.

    An emergency might not require a forced landing, just a precautionary landing away from the airfield -- say, due to unexpected adverse weather, running out of fuel, or mechanical failure. I've never come across a fixed wing instructor who has done an off airport (i.e. off runway) landing in a typical scenario (I know some who land on beaches). In my helicopter training I did hundreds of bush landings - it was routine.

    When the wind rose, all the training aeroplanes were chained down, and their rudders locked. At the helicopter school, this was the time we practised power off landings to the ground. 25 gusting 35 was stuff of nightmares for light aeroplane pilots (many can fly slower than that, with flaps down), but it's great training weather for helicopter pilots. A great number of fixed wing accidents occur due to lose of control on landing because of wind.

    Likewise, when flying fixed wing I'd break out in a sweat if I saw low cloud, or rain, or snow, or other features that might cause me to lose visibility. In mountainous terrain this is a frequent cause of accidents for fixed wing pilots. But in a helicopter training, I often flew below low cloud, in heavy rain, and with less than a mile visibility, or down valleys obscured with cloud -- it's just so easy to stop and turn around in a helicopter, or even land and wait for it to clear.

    Helicopter are 10,000 moving parts all trying to do you harm, but when something goes wrong you often have more options to save yourself than when flying fixed wing.

    KP
    Oh, dont get me wrong, I was just throwing around catchy cliches I've heard.
    I know know that safety isnt /really/ and issue, flying IS one of the safest hobbies there is. I also know theres more then what you've posted on the subject.

    And most importantly of all, I know what Pilots are like and not one of them, know matter how much they think they are, could give an unbiased opinion!

    I myself, am not a pilot... I ran out of money before I got my licence. If money had not been an option, I'd have been flying helicopters rather then planes.

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