The Kodiak Blog
Ask any student pilot what slows down their training and most will say the same thing: weather.
And they are not wrong. A solid VFR day in the Phoenix area can disappear by afternoon when monsoon season rolls in. Weather is real, it is unavoidable, and learning to read it is part of becoming a competent pilot.
What student pilots usually figure out somewhere around hour forty, when their certificate timeline is already longer than they expected, is that weather was not always the reason their flights got cancelled. A lot of those missed days came down to the airplane. A squawk that was not closed out. A maintenance cycle that ran long. A fleet with too many students and too few available aircraft. These are not weather problems. They are operational problems, and they quietly add weeks — sometimes months — to training timelines.
Under FAR Part 61, the private pilot minimum is 40 total flight hours; under Part 141 it drops to 35. Those are the legal floors. The national average for pilots who pass their private checkride sits between 60 and 75 hours. The gap between minimum and average is not mostly about student ability — it is about consistency. The pilots who finish near minimums fly two or three times per week without disruption. The ones who finish at 70 or 80 hours are dealing with weather, schedule conflicts, instructor availability, and aircraft that were not ready when they arrived.
The commercial certificate requires 250 total hours under Part 61, or 190 under Part 141. At the commercial level, building flight hours becomes a deliberate project, and every week an aircraft is unavailable is a week that push gets deferred.
Flight hours do not accumulate in theory. They accumulate on days when the weather is good, the instructor is available, and the aircraft is ready. Remove any one of those three, and the day is gone. Remove the aircraft too often, and the career timeline quietly shifts.
The unannounced morning grounding: you have checked weather the night before, it is a clean VFR day, you drive to the airport, do your preflight, and someone meets you with news that the aircraft threw a code overnight. Unlike a weather cancel you saw coming twelve hours earlier, a mechanical grounding hits when you are already mentally prepared to fly.
The slow-building squawk list: not every maintenance issue grounds an aircraft. Some items get deferred. Each individually might be technically deferrable. Collectively, they add cognitive overhead to flights where a student should be entirely focused on flying. And a squawk list that grows long enough eventually triggers a hold — usually at the worst possible moment.
The overbooking problem: a flight school running aggressive scheduling across a thin fleet creates a different kind of unavailability. The aircraft is technically airworthy, but every available slot has been claimed by someone who booked earlier. This disadvantages part-time students more than anyone.
We built Kodiak around one principle: the airplane has to be ready when the pilot is. Weather cancellations happen and that is part of learning to fly. But a pilot who drives to the airport on a perfect VFR morning and finds a broken airplane is not learning anything. They are just losing time. — Harbour Dollinger, Kodiak Aviation, Falcon Field
Weather cancellations have a shape to them. You can see them forming on a forecast twelve to eighteen hours out, and you reschedule before you have invested in the day. Mechanical cancellations are shapeless. They arrive without warning, and they do not have a predictable end point. Parts get ordered. Avionics shops get backed up.
Consider a student training toward a private certificate at three flights per week, averaging 1.5 hours per session. At that rate, reaching 65 hours takes around fourteen to fifteen weeks under clean conditions. Add one mechanical disruption per week — just one day where the aircraft is unavailable and rescheduling pushes the next lesson back three or four days. That single disruption cuts effective weekly hours by more than a third. The fourteen-week timeline becomes twenty or twenty-one.
The downstream cost of training delays becomes concrete when you look at the full arc from student pilot to airline first officer. After the commercial certificate comes the time-building phase — the stretch between the commercial and the 1,500 total hours the FAA requires for an ATP certificate. At the ATP level, seniority is set on hire date. Two pilots with identical credentials hired six months apart will hold meaningfully different positions on that seniority list for the rest of their careers: better bases, better schedules, earlier captain upgrades.
Seniority at a regional airline determines your base, your schedule, your upgrade timeline, and your quality of life for a thirty-year career. It is set on hire date. Two pilots with identical skills hired six months apart will hold that difference forever. Those six months often come down to how cleanly their training progressed.
When an aircraft behaves the same way every flight, your flows and scans become automatic. You are not mentally compensating for a throttle that sticks or a nav radio that needs a few extra seconds to lock on. That freed cognitive bandwidth goes toward the things that actually develop you as a pilot. The habits formed in a reliable aircraft transfer cleanly to any aircraft. The workarounds developed in an unreliable one do not.
Glass cockpit familiarity is career preparation, not just training — every hour logged in a glass-cockpit aircraft builds familiarity with the tools you will use professionally. And an FAA-certified simulator turns weather days into instrument days: a weather-cancelled morning does not have to be a zero. It can be an ILS, a hold entry, a partial panel scan — all countable, all meaningful.
These are operational questions, not adversarial ones. A well-run flight operation answers them confidently. An underprepared one hedges.
The logbook entry for a flight that got cancelled because of a grounded airplane looks exactly the same as a blank page: nothing. The hour does not exist, and it does not come back.
Weather will always be part of this. But accepting avoidable mechanical cancellations as a background condition of training builds nothing and costs time that pilots working toward commercial certificates and ATP minimums cannot afford to give away. When you are choosing where to build your flight hours, give the aircraft the same scrutiny you give the instructor. You will interact with it on every single flight, and its reliability will shape your trajectory more than almost any other factor you are in a position to control.
Ready to put it into practice? Rent the Cirrus SR20 G6 or book the FAA-certified simulator at Falcon Field.
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