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Staying IFR Current — The Hardest Part?

Is it worth it to get an instrument rating — or will it just encourage you to fly in poor weather when your instrument skills haven’t been used for weeks? “I want to continue to improve my skills,” “I want a goal to shoot for,” “I want to add utility to my flying,” said three different pilots — with three good reasons to earn an instrument rating. Yet each pilot followed his or her statement with: ‘But I’m not sure it’s worth it, because I don’t know if I’ll be able to maintain my instrument currency.” That, of course, is only half of the problem — it’ll likely take much more to keep you safe, than it will to keep you legal.

THE RULES
The Feds don’t require much for you to be “legal” to fly in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC). Once you have the instrument rating, though, to maintain the privilege of filing an IFR flight plan and/or flying in IMC is as simple as A, B, C. All you need to do is log — within the last six months — at least:

  1. Six instrument approach procedures of any kind;
  2. Holding procedures; and
  3. Intercepting and tracking courses through the use of navigation systems.

No minimum number of instrument flight hours is required for currency. (FAR 61.57).

ALTERNATE METHODS
If your time runs out and you’ve not logged enough of the above to be “current,” you have the option of taking an Instrument Proficiency Check (IPC) with a Certificated Flight Instructor — Instrument (CFII), an FAA examiner, or one of a very few other sorts of “authorized” persons. Of course, an FAA checkride for an “instrument” privilege (including the multiengine/instrument and ATP practical tests) resets the six-month “currency counter.”

KEEPING CURRENT AND SAFE
There’s no doubt that safely maintaining your IFR skill is going to take some time … and some money. Here are some things you can do, fairly often, to reduce your investment and increase your ability:

Bottom Line: Don’t let worries about maintaining currency keep you from going after your instrument rating, but understand that being IFR safe when you’re not an IFR ‘frequent flyer’ will take some vigilance. Still, there’s lots of things you can do to keep your instrument skills sharp without adding significantly to the cost of flying if you combine instrument practice with the flying you already do. And hey, if you do feel a bit rusty, you can always brush it off under the guidance of a CFII, without having to “re-do” the whole rating.

 

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