Flight Safety King Air 360 Type
Posted by Odd-Insurance-5677@reddit | flying | View on Reddit | 6 comments
Hey everyone,
Looking for some insight from folks who have gone through the King Air 360 initial type, specifically at the Tampa location.
Background on me: I’ve got \~1,500 hours in King Airs (mostly 200s and 90s), so I’m very comfortable in the platform overall. That said, this will be my first type rating, and I’ll be doing it single pilot, so I know it’s a different level of intensity.
A few things I’m trying to get a feel for:
- How big a jump is it from recurrent-style training to a full initial/type ride?
- How demanding is the single-pilot portion in the sim?
- Any gotchas with the 360 (Pro Line Fusion) that tend to trip people up?
- How fast-paced is the ground school—anything you wish you studied harder beforehand?
- Overall workload—manageable if you stay ahead, or pretty overwhelming regardless?
Not too worried about flying the airplane, more trying to calibrate expectations for the checkride standard and training tempo.
Appreciate any gouge or advice—especially from anyone who’s done it recently at Tampa.
nxj7437@reddit
PM me i work there
BagOfMoneyNoChange@reddit
It's stupid easy. Especially for someone with 1500 in type.
discgolfpilot@reddit
Ok my example 3 years c90 in aircraft 135. Then ATP changed companies to the c90 with annual at FSI with ATP ride first time for several years. Then type raring in jets.
The training and ride will be exactly what you are used to. No changes. Only difference assuming you had 135 293/297s will be can't mess up on the checkride or oral no retraining by the examiner. Will have to stop the check retrain and come back. But the ride itself will be the same you have done
Odd-Insurance-5677@reddit (OP)
I appreciate that. I’ve done my initials and recurrent in the past at Simcom for the 200 and 90’s.
discgolfpilot@reddit
I can say I have done my Jet stuff at CAE and the overall training is better at FSI in my experience. But as far as ground/sim/oral type vs no type you will be fine. Still going to buzz around KMEM and have some engine and auto pilot fails in the same spots. Lol
rFlyingTower@reddit
This is a copy of the original post body for posterity:
Hey everyone,
Looking for some insight from folks who have gone through the King Air 360 initial type, specifically at the Tampa location.
Background on me: I’ve got \~1,500 hours in King Airs (mostly 200s and 90s), so I’m very comfortable in the platform overall. That said, this will be my first type rating, and I’ll be doing it single pilot, so I know it’s a different level of intensity.
A few things I’m trying to get a feel for:
Not too worried about flying the airplane, more trying to calibrate expectations for the checkride standard and training tempo.
Appreciate any gouge or advice—especially from anyone who’s done it recently at Tampa.
Please downvote this comment until it collapses.
Questions about this comment? Please see this wiki post before contacting the mods.
I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. If you have any questions, please contact the mods of this subreddit.