Recurrent Training

We spend valuable hours and money doing things to our aircraft, including annual inspections, upgrades, and  checks.  We spend thousands of pounds on preventive maintenance mainly because we don't want to experience a failure in flight.  In contrast, as pilots we don't get the same checks and inspections.  We allow our competency to degrade until an instructor points out how low our standard has become during a  flight review every 24 calendar months.

The only way to avoid becoming a statistic is frequent, recurrent training.  Not only is it good sense, the FAA requires it, and so does your insurance.  If you hold a pilot certificate, you are required to obtain a flight review (BFR) every 24 calendar months.  If you are instrument rated, you are required to obtain a proficiency check (IPC) if you are not current. 

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# Article Title Author Hits
1 FAA Safety Team Head of Training 94
2 Other Free FAA Resources Arwyn Jones 455
3 Training Handbooks from the FAA Arwyn Jones 88
4 Maintaining FAA IFR Current Head of Training 157
5 FAA Aviation News Head of Training 132
6 FAA Certificate Paper or Plastic? Head of Training 222
7 Flight Review FAQ Head of Training 523
8 High Performance Endorsement Head of Training 499
9 High Altitude Video Head of Training 264
10 Using Foreign Registered Aircraft for Flying Training in the UK Head of Training 391