Airline Pilot Initial Qualification Training: What I Learned From My Third Type Rating

Share
Airline Pilot Initial Qualification Training: What I Learned From My Third Type Rating
Airline Pilot Initial Qualification Training Simulator

You’ve Already Done This

Your third Initial Qualification feels exactly like your first. You’d think it gets easier, and in some ways it does, but the nerves show up anyway. The night before training starts, the same questions creep in. What if I get behind in the sim? What if I fail a validation? What if this is the aircraft that finally exposes me?

I just finished my third Initial Qualification as an airline pilot, this time on the Airbus. And I’ll tell you honestly, I felt all of it. The initial excitement of flying something new, followed closely by that familiar low-grade anxiety that sets in when you realize how much there is to learn and how little time you have to learn it.

But here’s the reframe that got me through it, and the one I come back to every time training starts: by the time you’re sitting in an airline Initial Qualification, you have already taken somewhere between 8 and 15 checkrides. Think about that number. Every certificate, every rating, every type. Each one required you to perform under pressure, in an unfamiliar aircraft or scenario, in front of an examiner who wasn’t going to hand you anything. And you passed. Maybe not every single one on the first attempt, but you passed enough of them to get here. You are sitting in an airline training center because a major carrier looked at your record, your background, and your judgment and decided you were worth investing in.

This is just another checkride. That reframe matters more than any study technique, any memory system, any optimization strategy you could bring to training. Before you worry about how to study, remind yourself of what you’ve already proven.

On failure

I failed two checkrides during my training career. My Private Pilot checkride and my initial CFI checkride. At the time, both felt significant. The kind of failure that makes you question whether you’re cut out for this. I can tell you now, from the other side of a Delta new hire interview, that they were not the career-ending events my younger self feared they were.

When I sat across from the interviewers and those failures came up (and they did come up) what they were listening for had nothing to do with the failure itself. They wanted to know two things: did I take accountability for what went wrong, and what did I do to correct it? That’s it. The failure is almost incidental. Attitude is everything. A pilot who failed a checkride, owned it completely, identified the specific gaps, and came back stronger is a more compelling candidate than someone who skated through everything on autopilot and never had to dig deep when things got hard.

What you do with a failure defines you far more than the failure itself.

That said, context matters. I want to be honest with you about the stakes at different stages of your career. A failure during training at a Regional airline carries more weight than one at a Major, and you should understand why. At a Regional, you are still building the record that you will carry into your Major airline interview. Any training failures, any checkride busts, are going to come up in that interview room. That doesn’t mean they’re disqualifying. Plenty of pilots with training setbacks go on to get hired at the Majors. It does however mean you’ll need to have a clear, accountable, well-articulated answer ready. The scrutiny is real.

At a Major airline, the calculus is different. If you bust a validation or struggle through a sim session, the primary consequence is that you retake it. Your interview is behind you. Your seat is secure. The training department has seen everything, and a pilot who needs an extra session or has to repeat a checkride is not a novel event. You move through it, you get the type rating, and you go fly the line. It’s worth keeping that perspective when the anxiety starts to spike.

Preparation is the job

Here’s something I tried to do before my most recent Initial Qual that taught me a useful lesson: I spent time trying to build an optimized study system using AI tools. I wanted to create a personalized learning path, sequence the material more efficiently, get ahead of the curve before class started. Not uploading any training material, just coming up with a blueprint for an optimized learning path. I put real time into it.

Once training began, I abandoned it almost immediately. Not because the tools weren’t capable, but because I realized something important: the airline had already done this work. They train pilots every single day, across every experience level, every background, every learning style. They have been watching where pilots struggle and where they succeed for decades. The curriculum you receive in Initial Qualification is not a rough draft. It is a distillation of everything the training department knows about how to move a pilot from zero to qualified on that aircraft in the shortest possible time.

Your job is not to optimize the curriculum. Your job is to follow it.

That sounds simple, but it’s easy to overcomplicate training when anxiety is driving the bus. You start looking for an edge, for extra materials, for a better system. Most of the time, the edge is simpler than that.

Read the lesson plan before every single sim session. Not a skim. A real read. Know what maneuver is coming, know what the standard is, know what the common errors are. Pull up the charts for the procedures you’ll be flying and study them before you walk into the building. Chair fly. Sit in a quiet room and physically work through the flows, the callouts, the memory items. Do it until your hands know where to go before your brain has finished the thought.

Show up having done that work, and the sim will feel manageable. The pace will make sense. When the instructor throws something at you, you’ll have enough mental bandwidth to respond because you’re not spending it trying to remember where the fuel panel is.

Show up having skipped it (no lesson review, no chart study, no chair flying) and the sim will feel like it’s running about thirty seconds ahead of you the entire session. That feeling compounds. One rushed session bleeds into the next, and suddenly you’re behind in a way that’s hard to recover from.

The pilots who struggle in training are rarely the ones who lack the skills. They’re the ones who underestimated the preparation required and trusted that raw ability would carry them through. It usually doesn’t, not at this level.

Walk in ready

You’ve taken 8, 10, maybe 15 checkrides to get to this seat. You know how to prepare. You know how to perform under pressure. You’ve been evaluated by examiners who were looking for reasons to fail you, and you’re still here.

Initial Qualification is not the moment to doubt that record. It’s the moment to trust it.

Do the work before you walk in the door. Follow the curriculum. Show up ready for each session. And when you strap into that sim for the first time and the nerves arrive anyway (because they will) remind yourself that you have already done this. You just haven’t done it in this particular airplane yet.

That’s the only difference.