Reminds me. Last summer I was walking pastobscenely long and complicated method to start his airplane. Litterally, it was five full pages long. Some of the items required a magician's level of manual dexterity or at least two extra hands. Some of the things in his opinion required two crew to do. Bizarre. But when I voiced that there has to be an easier way to do this, he would have none of it. This info had been aquired from an "expert". We didn't get along after I called into question his "expert's" qualifications
the gas pumps and had a short conversation with
a Bonanza pilot who was filling his airplane up.
He informed me that to be an approved American
Bonanza Society (ABS) Flight Instructor, you had
to have logged FIVE THOUSAND hours just in the
right seat of a Bonanza as a flight instructor.
I pondered that for a moment, and replied that
my father had been an instructor on the CF-104D
transitioning pilots at the OTU at Cold Lake from
Sabres on to the -104, and that he probably only
had about 2500TT back in the early 60's when he
was doing that (actually a fair amount for a young
jet fighter pilot), and was the Beech Bonanza really
that much more of a handful than an F-104?
I have to wonder if ABS stands for "All Bull Sh1t".





