Checkride in 4 days and I feel completely unprepared
Posted by Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit | flying | View on Reddit | 118 comments
My private pilot checkride is in 4 days, and honestly I don’t feel ready at all.
This whole process has been dragging for the past 2 months. My checkride has been rescheduled about 3 times because of weather and DPE availability, and I feel like it completely threw off my momentum. Every time I got close, something pushed it back again.
Now that it’s actually happening, I feel rusty.
My last two flights were not good. I was behind the airplane, my maneuvers felt off, and overall I just didn’t feel like myself in the cockpit. It’s messing with my confidence a lot.
I know I’ve put in the work. I’ve trained for this, I’ve done the hours, passed the written, and I’ve had good flights before. But right now, it just feels like everything is slipping at the worst possible time.
I don’t know what to do, I don't feel I’m actually ready.
TLDR: Private pilot checkride in 4 days after multiple reschedules. Feeling rusty after bad recent flights and not confident at all. Not sure if it’s normal anxiety or if I’m actually unprepared.
Traditional-Cookie93@reddit
I felt like this before almost every check-ride. My flight before my commercial single I struggled to sat almost every maneuver. Flawless checkride. It’s hard not to get in your head after a couple rough flights when you don’t have a lot of time under your belt. My suggestion is that if you feel solid on the oral knowledge, try to fly one more time to build your confidence a bit, and take the checkride. We are our biggest critics, odds are the ride will go swimmingly.
Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit (OP)
I struggled to even hold level flight and bonuced on all of my landings the last flight for the first time in months. I also think because I wasn't well rested but still it is shattering my confidence.
mountainbrew46@reddit
Every time my final flight before a checkride went terribly, the checkride was flawless. Every time my prep flight was flawless, my checkride was a shit show. Just one of those rules
TheBridgeportB-2@reddit
It’s like having a flawless session at the range before you go out and shit the bed on the course… simply a law of life.
Lanky_Beyond725@reddit
Rest is super important. It's one of those things that really affect your cognitive abilities. Always leave a day off ahead of a checkride and get a good night's sleep.
SgtRoss_USMC@reddit
I got my PPL a couple weeks ago.
Flew for the first time since my checkride a couple days ago, ballooned on a gust, added a bit of power, settled back down and buttered.
You don't have to be perfect, recognize the mistakes and correct. The DPE is more interested in your ADM and knowledge. You got this!
Traditional-Cookie93@reddit
Pitch, power, trim. That’ll keep her level. Chair fly the shit out of your maneuvers and TOL’s, go over your flows, look over your checklists. In the plane, If you see yourself getting out of tolerances. VERBALIZE and correct it. The DPE is gonna see it, so you might as well acknowledge it and fix it rather than try to hide it. Don’t say “oops I’m out of tolerances”. Say something like “getting a little low, I’m gonna pitch up slightly.” Speak your way through ALL of the maneuvers, that always helped me. Also, I have never personally met a DPE who will fail you for getting slightly outside of tolerances and correcting it. Confidence is 100% mental and your flying abilities are directly tied to confidence level. Tell yourself you do this shit and, and you’re gonna show the DPE how you do this shit. Even if you don’t fully believe it, it will make you feel a little more confident. Good luck buddy. You can’t win if you don’t play!
HV_Conditions@reddit
Well you’re just getting the mistakes out of the way!
What’s your cfi say?
Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit (OP)
I didn't flew with my primary instructor, he's out of the town so the new CFI didn't really say anything but de-brefied on what went wrong.
wilburpilot@reddit
Funny enough one of the symptoms of being well prepared is feeling a little unprepared and nervous. It shows you’ve got good self awareness of the standards.
wilburpilot@reddit
How’d it go!?
nolaflygirl@reddit
I didn't go through that anxiety. I was well-prepared & FELT well-prepared. In fact, I was "chomping at the bit" to go, even though the weather was awful -- barely VFR w/ gusty winds! But I enjoyed every minute! On landing, I had to crab hard into a strong left xwind. The FAA Examiner said, "You passed." Then jumped out of the plane to go test a guy across the field.
Later that evening, he called my CFI & said, "You should be proud of her; she was able to land in winds that the other guy couldn't handle." He failed the other guy.
I never even entertained the idea that I wouldn't be able to land or pass. I wasn't arrogant -- just confident, bc I had scored well on the written (high 90s), & flew several times a week, so I was on top of everything. Plus, I LOVED studying the material & practicing the maneuvers. Maybe that's the key to NOT being nervous -- enjoy it all!
Maturity might have something to do w/ it too. I was 31 & finishing my B.A. at the same time. So studying my PPL course was a welcome break from studying some of the boring undergrad courses!
I had also performed on stage in front of hundreds of people & was never nervous, so maybe that had something to do w/ it too. I think I subconsciously viewed the checkride as another "performance". I definitely felt it was my chance to "shine" -- to show that I knew my stuff. A younger student doesn't necessarily have a background that prepares them for ANY type of "performance"...much less one as critical as this! We all bring different experiences to the table.
Sweaty_Delivery_2750@reddit
Why are people downvoting this? Genuine question lol
mild-blue-yonder@reddit
Cause it’s a genuine “Ma'am, this is a Wendy’s” moment. It’s pretty much irrelevant and only serves to brag about passing with a crosswind.
Sweaty_Delivery_2750@reddit
Yea I see it now lol
nolaflygirl@reddit
You do? That's unfortunate. It's also sad that you find it laughable. Bc I truly thought your first comment, asking why my comment was downvoted, meant that you understood the points I was making re nervousness about an impending checkride vs. joyful anticipation. But I guess it's easier...and safer...to fall in line w/ the rank & file, rather than to risk their disapproval.
I thought you understood that I was giving a personal example (as others have here re their checkride feelings/experiences) of how varying factors can affect one's checkride approach & ultimate experience.
Whereas others here related to OP's poor flights & nervousness prior to the checkride...I had a different, positive experience, & explained what that could likely have been attributed to.
Why should pilots here denigrate another pilot's VALID experiences just bc they didn't have the same ones?
We should want to learn from each other -- especially those w/ different experiences.
OP feels unready & nervous. I didn't, & gave possible reasons why that might've been. No two student pilots have the same background. Some people's life experiences prepare them for a smoother journey toward PPL or not.
For ex., a h.s. student w/ no work experience & living at home, vs. a mature college grad who's self-sufficient, will likely approach & experience flying lessons & other things very differently -- whether good or bad. For me, it was all good. Others here...not so.
But good experiences should be related as well as bad ones so new students can see that a checkride can be a wonderful & exhilarating experience!! Not necessarily something to dread! New students should hear BOTH sides!
Also, accurately stating what an Examiner said to my CFI about my checkride, in comparison to the other student's checkride, is not "bragging". It's simply fact. It was mentioned to illustrate how 2 students, facing the same test, by the same Examiner, on the same day, in the same weather conditions (also in the same type a/c -- a 172), handled it very differently. I gave possible reasons why.
So truthfulness here obviously gets downvoted. God forbid we should think for ourselves & learn from others who've had different experiences. Just go w/ the negative flow & you risk nothing!
Sweaty_Delivery_2750@reddit
I don’t doubt that you have good intentions and just want to share your experience, but it’s just irrelevant to helping OP’s situation. OP feels nervous bc his checkride has been rescheduled a few times and his last few flights didn’t go well. Your advice would be good for someone who is actually ready skill-wise but has “performance anxiety”, but it’s just not the case for OP now. A more practical advice would be to tell OP to keep practicing more until the day of checkride, and if he’s still not ready, reschedule it again, better than rushing and failing.
nolaflygirl@reddit
First of all, you must have missed that my original comment was in reply to another pilot -- NOT to OP. In fact, I NEVER gave ANY advice to OP. So your points are moot.
Also, if you read my original comment, it should've been clear that I know what OP's issue is bc the whole point of my comment was that I couldn't relate to his anxiety re the checkride & gave the reasons that I feel led to me having a better experience. I read OP's comment in FULL. So I wonder why you felt the need to tell me his problem.
In any case, re you suggesting what "practical" info I should tell OP...that's up to me. You have no place to tell anyone else what they should tell another poster. People advise others from their personal experiences & knowledge -- not from someone else's.
I've written several aviation articles, so I don't need any help from anyone to give him whatever advice I deem helpful. But others have said quite enough to him already, & my take is vastly different bc I didn't face the challenges he is. So why don't YOU impart those pearls of knowlege to OP? After all, they're from YOUR mind & experiences...not from mine or anyone else's. Not trying to be rude...you seem like a very nice person. It's just that no one can tell another person what they should say to someone. Advice has to come from the heart & be based on the advisor's own experience, as stated above. Peace.
Sweaty_Delivery_2750@reddit
Fair enough
mild-blue-yonder@reddit
Ma’am this is a Wendy’s
IGotRangod@reddit
God, I hope the above account is AI programmed to be annoying and arrogant because I can't imagine someone being this insufferable in real life.
buriedupsidedown@reddit
Unfortunate it’s gotta be a woman they’re imitating though. Be a generic troll.
nolaflygirl@reddit
Why do they have to be imitating a woman?
nolaflygirl@reddit
Is that the only thing you can say? It sounds just as ignorant the 2nd time!
mild-blue-yonder@reddit
Hey, while I have your attention, isn’t it ‘champing at the bit’ instead of ‘chomping at the bit?’
nolaflygirl@reddit
Either. "Chomping..." is more widely used. "Champing..." is archaic. The term comes from horse racing; the horse is "chomping" at his bit to get started with the race.
DirtyCFI@reddit
r/IAmTheMainCharacter
nolaflygirl@reddit
You obviously understood nothing bc it's not irrelevant. And you chose to focus solely on the crosswind aspect w/o comprehending its illustrative purpose. As I said elsewhere, it's not "bragging" to state what the Examiner said to my CFI, & the Examiner's comparison re another student under the same conditions. It was simply a fact to illustrate a point which you didn't care to try to understand. No sweat off my back.
mild-blue-yonder@reddit
Goddamn that’s a lot of words to say you’re not bothered.
nolaflygirl@reddit
It takes more words to explain the errors in your ignorant, rude comment than it takes for you to state the ignorant, rude comment.
AzuraFleet@reddit
“6’ 5” btw”
nolaflygirl@reddit
N/A. When one doesn't possess the wherewithal to make an intelligent, articulate comment that adds to the discussion, and/or doesn't even comprehend what another commenter is illustrating in order to make a point, one's only recourse is to resort to juvenile babble, which you have done.
No-Perspective-8245@reddit
You’ve got major 40 y/o unmarried English teacher vibes. Read the room sweetheart
nolaflygirl@reddit
I wasn't even replying to you. And you're wrong on ALL counts! Although you admit how very well-educated I am. Not 40 either. And not "unmarried" per se. My spouse died in an accident. And the "room" isn't important when its commenters deviate from OP's issue to turn their attention to belittling & disparaging another commenter's contribution.
And calling me "sweetheart" shows your total disdain & disrespect for a female pilot, & reveals just how misogynistic you are! The Moderators should remove your comment for that alone!
No-Perspective-8245@reddit
Educated ≠ Intelligent
I worry that you’re confident to a fault, you just became a hobby pilot 15 minutes ago. Let’s practice some humility, you don’t know what you don’t know Karen.
nolaflygirl@reddit
I'm educated AND intelligent. The oldest & most selective collegiate honor society in the U.S., founded in 1897, doesn't invite unintelligent people to be members. And membership is by invitation ONLY. I am a member.
So don't worry about me. Worry about yourself. I never even engaged you in this conversation.
And what do you mean by "hobby pilot"? I've been a fully licensed pilot for MANY years w/ a 1st Class Medical. A "hobby pilot" I am most certainly not. How dare you speculate about my licenses/ratings of which you know NOTHING.
And, once again, hurling insults & pejorative names. Now it's "Karen". I have stated the truth in all of my comments.
If you continue your rude, persistent, uninvited, & unwelcome attacks on me, I have no recourse but to report you. You engaged ME, & your hostile assaults now amount to HARASSMENT.
Ok-Refrigerator-9278@reddit
This HAS to be satire
No-Perspective-8245@reddit
I agree, I think I’m getting baited LOL. This account claims to be 80+ years old in another comment that would mean “she“ got her PPL 50 years ago. And “she” is still bragging about a degree from 50+ years ago 😂
nolaflygirl@reddit
Funny how some people think that an accomplishment expires. Everyone knows that licenses/ratings from PPL to ATP aren't all achieved at the same time. And everyone knows that degrees from Bachelor's to Doctorate aren't all completed at the same time. None of these expires. If a medical is current, the license is current. If one has degrees, they're always valid. The accomplishments are for forever -- whether attained in 1926 or 2026.
AzuraFleet@reddit
Probably right, aint no way someone is actually like this lol
HateJobLoveManU@reddit
Bro go away, you're annoying as shit
AzuraFleet@reddit
MY GOD dude i just passed ppl get a grip on yourself and your fuckass ego, your fucking nobody like the rest of us.
MountainMan17@reddit
Ooookay...
Aromatic-Evidence552@reddit
You’ve gotta be the most insufferable pilot I’ve ever come across. Very impressive. That’s an incredible accomplishment.
nolaflygirl@reddit
So I'm "insufferable" bc I stated the truth about my enjoyable checkride & have to continue answering nasty comments by people like you who keep engaging me. Interesting.
nolaflygirl@reddit
I haven't engaged you. If you feel that way, why are you engaging ME?
I was replying to someone else who said that "one of the symptoms of being well-prepared is feeling a little unprepared & nervous." I disagreed w/ that & said so, in a calm, articulate, polite manner, illustrating my reasons w/ a personal example. I never had any such anxieties, so I see no problem with stating the truth. If you have a problem with that, it's your problem.
Botherrr@reddit
I suppose you also had your Nobel Peace Prize waiting on the ramp for you when you were finished
nolaflygirl@reddit
Such sarcasm from an 18-yr-old h.s. grad who only got his PPL last year! I guess you think you're cute.
You have almost NO life experiences & no college degree yet. And probably still living w/ your parents.
You're talking to a mature adult w/ an advanced degree who's been flying longer than you've been alive. You have NO CLUE what lies ahead. I'm just thankful you're not one of MY students!
Botherrr@reddit
You betcha I’m thankful I’m not one of your students
zkoolie@reddit
Looooooser alert
nolaflygirl@reddit
Hardly. Take a look in the mirror. Calling a certificated pilot & a well-spoken, accomplished person a "loser", says nothing about me, but speaks volumes about how insecure YOU are.
Temporary_Purchase_6@reddit
You done jerking yourself off?
No-Perspective-8245@reddit
Ugh women are the worst, getta load of this one 🙄😂
whatdoestheregsay@reddit
This, I mentioned in my comment that I was way too hard on myself before check rides. I never felt like I was ready!
MrPlake@reddit
I flew like shit on my checkride and then DPE during the debrief was like stop death gripping the throttle and yoke. Guess what I passed.
Embarrassed_Dingo313@reddit
I feel like 2 hour oral for ppl is kinda brutal lol, not a 7 hour CFI oral but still😂
MrPlake@reddit
DPE was a united 737 check captain so he went over practically everything
Embarrassed_Dingo313@reddit
Oooof, well good job!
acesup1090@reddit
My instructor had to go full on "my controls" on short final on a tune up flight the day before my checkride. You're nervous and that's okay. Use it and channel it into focus. You got this.
Cool_Month7100@reddit
I struggled with the same. Dont get in your head. If you’re being recommended for it you’re capable to achieve it. You wouldn’t have gotten to this point if you weren’t. Put your head down, and trust your training.
_-Cleon-_@reddit
Deep breath. You got this.
I felt the same way before my checkride - keep in mind, as stressful as it is, the DPE is on your side. S(he) wants you to succeed, they're not trying to "get" you.
Just relax, don't overthink things, and do everything you've practiced. You'll do fine.
Lanky_Beyond725@reddit
This depends on the DPE. Some are absolutely out to get you!
streetracer28@reddit
Idk if I trust this Cleon. Might be a dusk question...
_-Cleon-_@reddit
Dusk is the DPE
Lanky_Beyond725@reddit
4 days, do a couple more lessons.
Spirit_of_No_Face@reddit
Ask yourself, do you not feel ready because you can’t perform the maneuvers within tolerance on an ideal day or because of nerves? If the former, better to cancel (again) and be frustrated, than to walk into certain failure, if the latter… go out and practice more with your CFI leading up to the checkride.
nolaflygirl@reddit
I can't relate to that. And never heard of that. I flew very well before the checkride. But, as stated elsewhere, I wasn't nervous about it. I was looking forward to it.
Ok-Refrigerator-9278@reddit
Why are you making this whole thread about you lol
nolaflygirl@reddit
I wasn't talking to you. I was replying to the person who said that "flying like s**t before the checkride is considered a rite of passage." I simply disagreed w/ that. I have a right to disagree. I have replied to mostly rude comments from people whom I have NOT engaged...such as you. So I have not made this "whole thread" about me. Others keep engaging me. That's fine.
srdev_ct@reddit
My flights before my checkride were HORRIBLE. Passed. -- Don't worry about it. If you are prepared, you're good.. It's anxiety, because you care, and want to do a good job. That's a good sign.
BurnTpotatO___@reddit
Pretty normal stress prior to checkrides. The only one i felt prepared for i failed lol. I felt so unprepared for my cfi checkride to the point i accepted failure before even going up there, went there and the oral and flight went flawlessly, and then as most get after any checkride the short lived imposter syndrome
csquiddy@reddit
It’s normal. I’ve had students with atrocious warm-up flights right before an EOC or checkride. We park the plane. I ask, “Got that all out of your system?” They nod and then go rock their checkride! It’s a good laugh in the end.
But make sure you have the good kind of nerves, not the “Oh god I haven’t studied or flown in three months” nerves.
ExpensiveCategory854@reddit
Let’s be very clear. You’re going to make mistakes and you’re being graded on how you handle them while keeping you and the DPE safes.
Change your perspective, they’re not looking for perfect. They’re looking for safe operation and solid ADM.
How much have you learned about your DPE’s tendencies?
OkResearch2394@reddit
I completely understand you. I had my checkride 5 days ago and felt the same. You’ll never feel 100% confident, but that doesn’t mean you’re not ready. The DPE is not looking for perfection, just safety. If you weren’t safe, you wouldn’t have made it to your solo.
Think about your solo, you probably didn’t feel ready either, but you still did it, and what you felt after is indescribable.
My DPE said: “We are humans, not perfect. If you lose more than 100 feet but correct it, I didn’t see anything.” Still, try to keep it within 50 feet. Don’t rush, start at the correct altitude ( don’t be lazy, if you see you 30 feet below or up, correct it, don’t wait until that creates a bigger issue).
You might not sleep well the night before, but having rest from previous days helps, so try to have a sleep routine days before.
For landings, remember a go-around is always an option. A good landing is all about energy management, keep your approach speed and look at the end of the runway for the flare.
I used X-Plane on my phone to practice. It’s not the same, but it helps you to get familiar with it.
Good luck, you got this. You’re already acting as a private pilot, you’re just proving it!!!
batnipDPE@reddit
I am a DPE. I am also a Master Flight Instructor with over 5,000 hours dual given, and over 13,000 hours total time. Every year I try to do something that improves me as a 1. Pilot, 2, CFI, 3, DPE. Last year I obtained another Type Rating (Airbus A320). 4 days before the checkride I was experiencing the same feeling you are now. I did not feel ready, was sick with worry, afraid I was going to bust. I knew I could fly, but did not feel good about the ground portion. Stayed up late every night trying to remember memory items, limitations, systems, flows, and callouts, etc.
Significant_Yam_3456@reddit
it took me months to get my private just because rescheduling and dpe availabilty, it happens. point is youre not alone. feel good in the fact you have the right mindset, you've done the work, youve passed the tests, youve done everything well enough to get to checkride. You Are Prepared. bad flights are apart of it, but its time for the next step, you are ready!
SyncTheSquirrel@reddit
Prepare to feel unprepared for every single checkride you take! Welcome to aviation!
(you’ll do just fine)
mustardgas_roses451@reddit
Read the ACS! Do a mock with your CFI. Read your POH. Make an XC flight plan. You will be fine!
Dazzling-Word587@reddit
Coming from an anxious person that is currently working on commercial. Being anxious sucks but it is a good motivator. Keep studying and keep practicing until the check-ride. It’s normal but don’t drown in your own anxiety work around it. This is most known as pre-exam anxiety
whoaitsjello@reddit
I’ve felt unprepared for every one of my checkride’s. I think it’s a good thing. You won’t be complacent.
Purple-Caterpillar57@reddit
I have my CFII checkride in 2 days. It’s the first checkride I’ve had that I feel confident about and haven’t been losing sleep over. What you’re feeling sucks but it’s normal.
the_sun_is_out@reddit
This just happened to me, the rescheduling. I then got a chance to cram the week before to dust the rust off but I went in exhausted and nervous as hell, expecting myself to perform better because I lucked out with a solid week of intense prep. This eroded my confidence throughout the exam
I don’t think there IS a perfect scenario for most folks.
I just kept trying to remind myself that this is a really fucking cool thing to get to do and all of the emotions, perceived good or bad, are really special to get to feel for this experience.
Good luck 🤘
night_flight3131@reddit
It's normal to make mistakes before checkrides and even on checkrides, but I'd say the big thing is being able to identify your own performance in the moment
Last week, I had an end of course stage check where every maneuver was just slowly worse and worse until I discontinued. Went up the day after with my CFI, flew perfectly again. If you're able to recognize when you're behind the airplane and the maneuvers aren't up to the same standards you'd like them to be on the day of the checkride, you're allowed to discontinue. But if everyone canceled checkrides because they flew poorly shortly before them, nobody would be doing checkrides.
RaptorO-1@reddit
Not a soul in the world doesn't feel at least a little nervous before a checkride.
Altruistic_Map1816@reddit
I had the same feeling going in. Totally normal. As long as you have the ground down, you managed to plan and fly ur solo XC, and you can fly the maneuvers without compromising safety, you have very little to worry about. The DPE doesn’t expect perfection, and your instructor wouldn’t be sending you to the checkride if they didn’t feel confident you have what it takes. You’ve already put in the work, the checkride is just an opportunity for you to show off what you’ve learned.
TxAggieMike@reddit
This is from Ron Levy, a very experienced flight instructor I had the privilege of knowing in my early days
Captain Ron said:
Relax and enjoy it. Nationwide, about 90% of applicants pass on the first try, so look around and see if you think you’re as good as 9 out of 10 other students. Also, your instructor desires to maintain a pass rate of at least 80% in order to attain the FAA Gold Seal on his certificate. So he’s not going to send you up unless he’s pretty darn sure you’ll pass – otherwise, he has to find four other people to pass to make up for you, and that’s not always easy.
Go over with your instructor the logbooks of the aircraft you're going to use the day BEFORE the checkride to make sure it's all in order (annual, transponder checks, ELT ops and battery, 100-hour if rented, etc.). If the airplane's paper busts, so do you. Run a sample W&B, too – get the examiner’s weight when you make the appointment. If you weigh 200, and so does the examiner, don’t show up with a C-152 with full tanks and a 350 lb available cabin load – examiners can’t waive max gross weight limits.
Relax.
Rest up and get a good night's sleep the night before. Don't stay up "cramming."
Relax.
Read carefully the ENTIRE ACS including all the material in the Appendices. Use the checklist in the appendix to make sure you take all the stuff you need -- papers and equipment. And the examiner’s fee UP FRONT (too much chance a disgruntled applicant will refuse to pay afterward) in the form demanded by the examiner is a “required document” from a practical, if not FAA, standpoint.
Relax.
You’re going to make a big mistake somewhere. The examiner knows this will happen, and it doesn’t have to end the ride. What’s important is not whether you make a mistake, but how you deal with it – whether you recover and move on without letting it destroy your flying. Figure out where you are now, how to get to where you want to be, and then do what it takes to get there. That will save your checkride today and your butt later on.
Relax.
You're going to make some minor mistakes. Correct them yourself in a timely manner "so the outcome of the maneuver is never seriously in doubt" and you'll be OK. If you start to go high on your first steep turn and start a correction as you approach 100 feet high but top out at 110 high while making a smooth correction back to the requested altitude, don't sweat -- nail the next one and you'll pass with "flying colors" (a naval term, actually). If you see the maneuver will exceed parameters and not be smoothly recoverable, tell the examiner and knock it off before you go outside those parameters, and then re-initiate. That shows great sense, if not great skill, and judgement is the most critical item on the checkride.
Relax.
During the oral, you don’t have to answer from memory anything you’d have time to look up in reality. You never need to memorize and know everything. Categorize material as:
Things you must memorize (i.e. emergency procedures, radio calls, airspace, etc).
So if the examiner asks you about currency, it’s OK to open the FAR book to 61.56 and 61.57 and explain them to him. But make sure you know where the answer is without reading the whole FAR/AIM cover-to-cover. On the other hand, for stuff you’d have to know RIGHT NOW (e.g., best glide speed for engine failure, etc.), you’d best not stumble or stutter – know that stuff cold. Also, remember that the examiner will use the areas your knowledge test report says you missed as focus points in the oral, so study them extra thoroughly.
Relax.
Avoid this conversation:
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: I have a #2, a mechanical, a red one...
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: I also have an assortment of pens, and some highlighters...
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: Yes.
Examiner - Thank you.
One of the hardest things to do when you’re nervous and pumped up is to shut up and answer the question. I've watched people talk themselves into a corner by incorrectly answering a question that was never asked, or by adding an incorrect appendix to the correct answer to the question that was. If the examiner wants more, he'll tell you.
Relax
Some questions are meant simply to test your knowledge, not your skill, even if they sound otherwise. If the examiner asks how far below the cloud deck you are, he is checking to see if you know the answer is “at least 500 feet,” not how good your depth perception is. He can’t tell any better than you can, and the only way to be sure is to climb up and see when you hit the bases, which for sure he won’t let you do.
Relax
Remember the first rule of Italian driving: "What's behind me is not important." Don't worry about how you did the last maneuver or question. If you didn't do it well enough, the examiner must notify you and terminate the checkride. If you are on the next one, forget the last one because it was good enough to pass. Focus on doing that next maneuver or answering the next question the best you can, because while it can still determine whether you pass or fail, the last one can’t anymore. If you get back to the office and he hasn't said you failed, smile to your friends as you walk in because you just passed.
Relax and enjoy your new license.
Ron Levy, ATP, CFI, Veteran of 11 license/rating checkrides, including 4 with FAA inspectors
nolaflygirl@reddit
I've seen this posted before & it's certainly very good, but I disagree w/ #s 8 & 10.
Every student doesn't make a big mistake, nor necessarily even minor ones. Some students' checkrides are just fine. Mine went well. No mistakes big or small...& it was done in barely VFR conditions, w/ strong, gusty winds.
#s8 & 10 are not "givens". I'm sure I wasn't the only student who performed well on a checkride. A student's reading of #s8 & 10 COULD result in a self-fulfilling prophecy. So I disagree w/ interjecting negativity in this list bc it's not a fact that every student makes big and/or small mistakes.
nolaflygirl@reddit
I've seen this posted this before & it's certainly very good, but I disagree w/ #s 8 & 10.
Every student doesn't make a big mistake, nor necessarily even minor ones. Some students' checkrides are just fine. Mine went well. No mistakes big or small...& it was done in barely VFR conditions, w/ strong, gusty winds.
#s8 & 10 are not "givens". I'm sure I wasn't the only student who performed well on a checkride. A student's reading of #s8 & 10 COULD result in a self-fulfilling prophecy. So I disagree w/ interjecting negativity in this list bc it's not a fact that every student makes big and/or small mistakes.
whatdoestheregsay@reddit
Best comment in this thread!
Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit (OP)
This sounds so good, thank you for sharing it.
MangoEmbarrassed2998@reddit
Such a checkride kind of thing. Best thing I try to tell myself is that my instructors wouldn’t put me up for it if I wasn’t ready AND it’s “my” aircraft. So just do exactly whst you’d do with no one in there grading you
Ramblingtruckdriver1@reddit
Many samples on YouTube .
CaptMcMooney@reddit
fly for the next 2 days, take 1 day off, checkride
EducationExpress3376@reddit
Just remember YOU are awesome & you want this super bad! You got this! We’re all rooting for you!
Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit (OP)
aww, you are so sweet! Thank you so much ❤️
ltcterry@reddit
It’s been yanked out from under you three times. Yet each time you were prepped and ready. Your CFI thought you were good to go.
Believe in yourself. No instructor is going to send you if they expect you’ll fail. This means you’ll meet the standards.
Do make sure all your endorsements are up to date.
TxAggieMike@reddit
And all the documents/inspections on the exam airplane are good to go.
A DPE friend says that bad documentation on the exam airplane is some of the most frustrating reasons for a NoD..
ltcterry@reddit
Not a NoD; it never started. But still a wasted, valuable slot.
85inchweener@reddit
Imo you shouldn’t be taking a checkride if you’re not feeling at least 90% ready. Ik some schools shove u thru flight training fast and schedule checkrides and stuff and financial aspects are there but don’t risk a failure for the future
LowAndSlow__@reddit
You’re in your own head, and I know that because I’ve been in your shoes before. Shift your mindset. Two lines of thought that help me check myself in high stress scenarios. Learned these hard way:
You’re not nervous you’re excited.
Remember that you are what you think you are, so watch what you think. Rumination and lack of confidence will destroy you. You can have the ability, but without truly believing it you’re never gonna perform at 100%. Having trouble believing in your ability? If you tell yourself the same lie 100 times it will become reality in your mind. Sounds crazy but it’s human psychology. Remember, everyone around you believes you can do it. You wouldn’t have gotten signed off if that wasn’t the case. You’re outnumbered. So, I guess when you think about it like that, is it really even lie that you’d need to convince yourself of?
Conquer the voice in your head. You can be your biggest enemy or your greatest asset. It’s all mental.
mirassou3416@reddit
Congratulations on getting this far. Waiting for you to reply when you pass your checkride!
Leonidas243@reddit
I resonate with this very much. I also had multiple rescheduled bc of DPE availability for my ppl ride.
Remember, you’ve worked really hard to get to this point. All the hours. All the XC planning. All the good days, and the bad ones. It’s all been building to this moment and YOU CAN DO THIS.
Try some positive affirmations bc your confidence is a huge part of your success.
“I’ve worked hard for this and I CAN be a pilot”
“I trust in my abilities as a Pilot”
“I have studied and am ready to showcase my knowledge and understanding of Private Pilot Privileges”
Keep reviewing, eat a healthy meal, drink water, get good sleep. Put yourself in the best place, mentally and physically, so you can make the most of this opportunity.
You’ve got this!
Rictor_Scale@reddit
One thing I'll add that almost bit me. Once the DPE says "the exam has started" he is not your buddy or co-worker. No casual chit chat, jokes, funny stories about your training, etc. Be short, polite, and business like. In the airplane if he keeps you flying and at times it feels awkwardly quiet then you are doing it right.
Good luck.
Jzerious@reddit
How often have you reviewed the ACS?
SayNoTo-Communism@reddit
I got my A&P practical in 4 days and feel the same way lol. Due to how my school is setup I haven’t done a practical project in a year
deer_god11@reddit
A or P? Or both at the same time?
SayNoTo-Communism@reddit
Both at the same time
KITTYONFYRE@reddit
I hope you've got some flights planned over the next few days to build back that confidence!
and I'm a classic "flight before shit, checkride passed fine" example too. but I would much rather have gotten in another flight between those two to know "yes, I can in fact fly planes"
whatdoestheregsay@reddit
So, PPL check feels tough because it’s the first check ride. I remember I was so nervous that I puked the night before mine, but after I was talking to my wife about it, I realized that I was just being too hard on myself, thinking I would fail, and holding myself to a way higher standard than the ACS required, I’m talking beating myself up for losing 10’ on steep turns. I passed, and it wasn’t nearly as intense as I expected.
Just take it slow, take your time when setting up maneuvers, and don’t execute the maneuvers until you’re feeling good about it. Slow is smooth, smooth is fast.
Also, if you fuck something up, don’t talk about it further than saying “correcting”. A lot of times the DPE remembers when he made little harmless mistakes when they were in your shoes, or they might not have even noticed, so don’t throw yourself under the bus.
Lastly, please don’t say ATOMATOFLAMES in your oral. You can use it to write it out, but also know 91.205 by heart.
Good luck homie, I’m sure you’re going to crush it!
jayreggy@reddit
Perfection is not the standard
SombraMonkey@reddit
It’s fine, it’s not the end of the world if you don’t pass it on the first try, if you know what to expect, then it should make the next one easier.
Remember. A pilot must be calm and confident when flying a plane. Same goes for the checkride.
PhilRubdiez@reddit
Do you trust your instructor? He’s not going to sign you off unless he feels like you can do it.
I’d recommend a flight or two to make you feel better, some light studying (an hour or two), and creating some superstition that helps you react. I watch Top Gun the night before my rides (add in a beverage, if of age). Helps me relax and get a good nights sleep.
Imaginary-Knowledge4@reddit (OP)
already been signed off a month ago. I would like to practice more before the check but the weather here in Midwest not co-operating. I have been trying to fly for the past few days but no luck. The only time when the weather is clearing is directly on my check ride day 💀
PhilRubdiez@reddit
I feel it, fellow Midwesterner. My CFI ride took five attempts at scheduling because of the weather. The last one was because the DPE got stuck in church traffic and we couldn’t beat the storms coming in. Just do what you can, even if it’s just pattern work. In the meantime, relax. You’ll be fine.
Aviator8989@reddit
Welcome to the club Buddy we got jackets
RealP4@reddit
Probs just nerves. You will never know everything when going for a checkride. Just study the next couple days and brush up on things. Maybe do a flight. And you should be good to go. Night before sleep well, eat good, don’t think about flying. When checkride day comes around fly gud
Phillimac16@reddit
It's normal. I like to think DPE's understand that you're nervous AF and if you have a cool DPE like I did they'll give you a little leniency if you FU something simple. Remember they don't really care if you know the acronyms and they'll quiz you on situational awareness and less "by the book" stuff (but still know it).
rFlyingTower@reddit
This is a copy of the original post body for posterity:
My private pilot checkride is in 4 days, and honestly I don’t feel ready at all.
This whole process has been dragging for the past 2 months. My checkride has been rescheduled about 3 times because of weather and DPE availability, and I feel like it completely threw off my momentum. Every time I got close, something pushed it back again.
Now that it’s actually happening, I feel rusty.
My last two flights were not good. I was behind the airplane, my maneuvers felt off, and overall I just didn’t feel like myself in the cockpit. It’s messing with my confidence a lot.
I know I’ve put in the work. I’ve trained for this, I’ve done the hours, passed the written, and I’ve had good flights before. But right now, it just feels like everything is slipping at the worst possible time.
I don’t know what to do, I don't feel I’m actually ready.
TLDR: Private pilot checkride in 4 days after multiple reschedules. Feeling rusty after bad recent flights and not confident at all. Not sure if it’s normal anxiety or if I’m actually unprepared.
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