I’ve been considering this for a number of years. Light Sport, restrictions and all, suits my mission well -No need to stress over the medical, and I get to take some fairly capable planes into the sky. Travel is secondary and perhaps irrelevant - I’m 180lbs, and my wife is somewhat more, so in addition to a minima useful load beyond us, there are possible CG and balance issues as I understand it.

We don’t seem to have anyone giving lessons truly locally, but that’s fine. Let’s say I’m based near Chambana, IL. So far, available A/C look like this:

  • Lots of Evektors
  • one school has a Remos GX and Flight Design CTLS
  • There’s a single Aeroprakt A22.

The latter is of some interest for me for personal reasons, and also seems a touch slower, but none of them give me pause, really.

I expect to use speed as a tool for enjoying being in the air, not because I’ve any need to quickly get from A to B.

I’ve looked over the generalities of ground school content - it’s not familiar to me already, but I can put in the necessary time and energy to learn it. I’ll be on disability for 4+ weeks soon following a minor surgery, so study time isn’t a problem.

Any instructor and plane will require a bit of a trip, which I’m fine with.

Several schools have caught my eye as at least worth a second look - curious if anyone has insight on any of these folks (or the airports they operate from):

  • SRT Aviation Mt Vernon, IL
  • CityWings.net Schaumburg, IL
  • Jet Access Indianapolis, IN (and others)
  • Sport Pilot Chicago Newark, IL
  • St Charles Flying Svc St Charles, MO

They are all roughly equidistant from me, save the last one being a bit farther.

Also, how do I interview an instructor, aside from qualifications? I’m going in with minimal enough knowledge that I don’t know at least some of the obvious questions to ask.

For what it’s worth, LSA is a goal unto itself for my mission - no intention to use as a stepping stone to PPL, etc.

Thanks

  • ____@infosec.pubOP
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    1 month ago

    Thanks, that’s exactly the sort of thing I was looking for - I generally work well with most people, but I know myself well enough to know that there are a handful of folks I might not be quite on the same wavelength with.

    Relative to the overall cost of training, an initial lesson or discovery flight seems like a pretty low-cost/low-risk way to get a feel for the people, and also for how they treat their equipment.

    • Jardthebard@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      When you start, if you have any concerns about your CFI or the flight school as a whole feel free to post here again or DM me directly and I can help point out any red flags.