Training
Sailplane training in Germany has the following requirements:
· At least 25 hours flight, therefrom 15 alone.
· At least 60 Take offs, therefrom 20
alone.
· At least 3 landings on foreign airport
· Emergency landing training
· 50 km XC alone or 100 km with trainer
· Training in dangerous flight states
· Aircraft radio licence
· Theory
Here is a good document describing it (in German) -> [link]
One can chose to do the training in your local club or in professional school (or combination of both).
I decided to accelerate my training and went to professional flight school training.
Usually it takes 2 years to complete the training in a club. In a school I completed my training within 1.5 months from the very first flight to final exam flight :-)
If you are in the hurry (as I was) - here are a few tips for turbo-licence:
· Prepare in winter: start reading Theory, fly simulator and if possible do radio licence.
· Beginning of April: go to commercial school, best with towing, for 2 weeks in a row. With a little luck & talent you can do your first flight after a week. In a second week you can collect your airtime & polish skills. Beginning of April has an advantage that schools are still empty and you can fly as much as you can.
· Pass Theory: do it immediately after being in school - without Theory you can not make your XC flight or emergency landing training.
· Hunt for your XC flight: in club or in school collect required airtime & starts - wait for a good day and when it comes - do your XC flight.
· Get warm for practical exam & pass it: once you got your minimums - register for exam. Day before train again with instructor so you know what exactly is important. Now you ready - go and get it!
and now more details:
Choosing the right club
Basically regardless if you plan to buy a sailplane or not, you will need a club. Here you have a selection of few sailplanes you can cheaply use or place to store your own. Secondly you need home airport with winch and/or tow start possibility. Thirdly it is fun to share your passion with other pilots.
Choosing the right club for you it not simple. I was visiting many clubs is in my area, talking to people & trying to get a feel about the places. Here are my decision factors:
· Size of the club - big more organized & regulated; small more flexible & personal
· Ratio between number of club sailplanes & active members, so that you can get a plane
· Good, thermal active airports placement
· Airport free of CTR
· club cost & continent of obligated working hours
· Most important, people you will get along with
I finally decided to join small club with thermal active airport and nice sailplanes.
Here is homepage of my new club -> [link]
Choosing the right School
This is tough! Here are consideration I am taking:
· Size of the school - big is more organized & regulated, have enough planes trainers
· School localization - you need good weather to fly, I try avoid school in north alps, high on the hill, in bad weather areas etc.
· Recommendations - read what other say about schools
· Winch (cheap but short flight) or air tow (expensive but more flight time) starts
· Cost, infrastructure, operating times etc.
Here is my top list in Germany:
School | Description |
---|---|
SCHOOL CLOSED :-( |
· Located in Schwäbisch Alb next to Stuttgart |
Deutsche Alpensegelflugschule Unterwössen e.V. | · Located at the north Alps border - and this is a key issue - the weather is very unstable & unreliable. SUMMARY: great for Alpine flights for advanced pilot on selected, good days. |
Segelflugschule Oerlinghausen e.V. | · Located in north Germany in flatland next to Paterborn · Big runaway, plenty of space, no wind issues or turbulence · Winch used for training -> very inexpensive solution · Biggest school in Germany, very well organized & professional, recommended SUMMARY: great for initial training, my top candidate, however known for bad weather in April. |
Segelflugschule Wasserkuppe | · Located mid Germany in Rhön on 900m high mountain (highest in Hessen) - this is a key issue - too windy and with unstable weather. Wasserkuppe is not very thermal active. SUMMARY: however close to me, I do not plan to go there, there are better choices. |
Fränkische Fliegerschule Feuerstein e.V. | · Located in mid-east Germany in Thüringen - hilly region on top of plateau, close to Bamberg · Big runaway, plenty of space, no wind issues or turbulence · Towing used for training -> expensive · very big school, very well organized & professional, recommended SUMMARY: great for initial training, my second top candidate. |
So for initial training the best choice is INMO Feuerstein or Oerlinghausen. Key difference is winch vs. towing. First is cheaper but flights are very short, second is expensive but you will have plenty airtime. Finally I went to Feuerstein & very happy about it.
Pre-training -> fly simulator
In order to move quickly forward with training, I decided to train in the winter on the computer simulator. The best on the market is definitely "Condor" - very realistic! you can not only fly from home but also fly on-line with others and (!!) fly on-line competitions - very exciting. Recommended! Here are some links:
I would like also recommend you right equipment for simulator flying. You will obviously need a good joystick but invest in pedals for maximum reality. Here are my pics:
- Joystick - go for Microsoft Sidewinder Force Feedback 2. I tested many and this is the best and has feedback feature increasing level of reality. It is not produced anymore, so you need to get one on the ebay -> [link].
- Pedals - take SAITEK Pro Flight Rudder Pedals. They are expensive but worth every penny. With pedals your simulation is perfect! Here is producer site -> [link]
Aircraft radio licence (Flugfunk)
I have just passed my international radio licence ( BZF I). I took a course offered in Worms [link] which was very, very useful. Preparation took like 1.5 months inc. weekly classes to practice talking with "tower". Quite a fun. I post here a little useful learning material:
- Catalog with questions (in German) -> [link]
- Examples for exam translation from German to English -> [link]
- Link to very useful VOR navigation simulator -> [link]
Theory for the exam
One can go to commercial school, leard in club during winter or do self-learning. I did everything in self-learning mode but if you a total beginner in flying Iwould recomend a commercial school - best all in 1 condensed week. Below you can find few links to help in preparation:
- PPL- Questions on-line for free -> [link]
- PPL question to download for free -> [link] (old questions)
- Best buy a catalog with questions - it is crucial - you can sell it afterwards
- The right book for study - "Der Segelflugzeug Führer" Band 7
- you can purchace it here -> [link]