wolfbyte Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 Looking for a CFI who has (per insurance): 300 TT 100 TT in retractable gear/complex planes 15 TT in Mooney M20E (has to be same Make & Model) The plane in question is out of KFLY in Colorado Looking to accomplish this next week as of writing (Week of 8/25) Thanks! Quote
M20F Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 I was going to recommend @midlifeflyer but apparently he moved 12yrs ago to RDU. I need to keep up with things better. 1 Quote
Marc_B Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 I know of two CFI's in Colorado that both own and fly M20K 252's regularly (one at KCOS, the other at KBJC) I'll send you a DM. edit: both have M20E time. My comment was that they are CFis but they owns Mooneys as well. @MarcJohnson @gsxrpilot 1 Quote
Pinecone Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 12 hours ago, Marc_B said: I know of two CFI's in Colorado that both own and fly M20K 252's regularly (one at KCOS, the other at KBJC) I'll send you a DM. His insurance requires M20E time. Quote
MarcJohnson Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 (edited) 2 hours ago, Pinecone said: His insurance requires M20E time. All good there. I know that guy. Edited August 21, 2024 by MarcJohnson 1 Quote
midlifeflyer Posted August 21, 2024 Report Posted August 21, 2024 7 hours ago, Pinecone said: His insurance requires M20E time. If the CFI fills in an application to be added to the policy as an approved pilot, time in type might or might not matter depending on what relevant experience the CFI has. The primary underwriting difference between an “open” pilot and an “approved” or “named” pilot is one looks at some generic pilot off the street while the other looks at a specific person. An extreme example (and I thought the underwriter must have been smoking something funny) was my insurance approval for an Ovation with zero time in type, Quote
Pinecone Posted August 22, 2024 Report Posted August 22, 2024 21 hours ago, midlifeflyer said: If the CFI fills in an application to be added to the policy as an approved pilot, time in type might or might not matter depending on what relevant experience the CFI has. The primary underwriting difference between an “open” pilot and an “approved” or “named” pilot is one looks at some generic pilot off the street while the other looks at a specific person. An extreme example (and I thought the underwriter must have been smoking something funny) was my insurance approval for an Ovation with zero time in type, That is what I would try. Heck, my insurance for my CAP-10 required NO transition. And I had a whopping 2 hours 40 years ago. Quote
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