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It could be done in under 2 days if you had no sleep - obviously not a great plan for a novice pilot!

2007-08-18 07:40:57 · 8 answers · asked by HoundDog 2 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

8 answers

While I was doing my training, a guy came to my instructor with his newly purchased 172. He completed his training in a little over a week.

2007-08-18 13:12:52 · answer #1 · answered by cf_fills 2 · 0 1

40 hours are required. Instructors are only allowed 8 hours per day, so using the same instructor it could be done in 5 days. The shortest I personally know of is 2 weeks.

2007-08-18 19:01:26 · answer #2 · answered by eferrell01 7 · 0 0

I am sure you could fly 45 hours in little time, but you do realize that there is ground component involved.. preflights, planning, etc. You don't just straight and level for 45 hours, but you must be able to do all maneuvers like stalls (many different types), cross-country planning and flying. All that takes time. You could do it in one month, but the question is will you will pass your FAA check-ride?

2007-08-18 15:55:39 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Well with a little p-51 time you could do it in 30 minutes. Once knew a student that only had 12 hours of instruction and about 10 hours of solo. The rest he just "wrote in" his logbook.

2007-08-18 19:27:25 · answer #4 · answered by steven f 1 · 0 1

A month. You are only allowed to fly for a certain amount of time daily- and it is obviously not 24 hours in a row!

2007-08-18 14:43:58 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

you only need 40, not 45

2007-08-18 16:15:16 · answer #6 · answered by dumbasspilot 5 · 3 0

45 rugged hours!

2007-08-18 22:43:10 · answer #7 · answered by Sean 3 · 0 0

45 hours lol.

2007-08-18 14:43:18 · answer #8 · answered by D and G Gifts Etc 6 · 2 1

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