The Instrument Checkride Scenario That Confuses Students

Many instrument students understand how to fly an approach. Far fewer understand how a DPE expects that approach to be evaluated during a checkride. That misunderstanding can lead to confusion, poor decision-making, and sometimes even an unsatisfactory result. In this video, we'll look at a simple framework CFIIs can use to prepare students for instrument approach scenarios on the practical test. We'll discuss how the hood should be used during training, how examiners commonly simulate breaking out of the clouds, and what students should be expected to do on both precision and non-precision approaches. Topics covered: • How DPEs commonly evaluate instrument approaches • Simulated IMC and proper hood usage • Precision approaches and decision altitude procedures • Non-precision approaches and MDA discipline • Missed approach point evaluation • Common student misunderstandings • Training techniques CFIs can use before the checkride • Creating realistic checkride-style approach scenarios • Preventing avoidable checkride failures The key principle is simple: If the hood is on, the student should assume they're in the clouds. Once instructors and students consistently apply that rule, many common checkride misunderstandings disappear. This video is intended for CFIIs and instrument students preparing for the instrument rating practical test. Looking for complete instrument training resources? FlightInsight's IFR training programs and instructor resources are helping thousands of pilots prepare for checkrides and real-world IFR operations. 👉 https://www.flight-insight.com/ifr