Took my Private Pilot written test last Thursday. Scored 89% — happy with that. Studied for 9 weeks, about 45 minutes a day on weekdays and 2 hours on Sunday mornings.
Weather was the section that surprised me. I knew it'd be on there but not how deep it goes — wind shear, mountain waves, pressure systems, METARS and TAFs. That section alone took 3 weeks of focused study.
Airspace questions are straightforward once you visualize the structure. Draw it out, don't just read about it. Navigation calculations — time, speed, distance — just need practice under timed conditions.
I used Sporty's study app for 8 weeks. The question bank is basically the actual exam bank. Hit every question at least 3 times and you're in good shape.
The night operations section tripped me up. Physiology questions about vision in low light conditions, oxygen requirements at altitude — those are easy points once you know them.
Weather is where most people drop points. METARS/TAFs look intimidating but they're just codes — once you decode 50 of them the format becomes automatic.
Congrats on 89%! Now comes the fun part — the check ride. That's where the real nerves kick in.
Honestly I almost quit around week 5. The weather stuff felt like it would never click and I kept bombing the practice questions on pressure systems. I put it down for like 4 days and told myself maybe this wasn't the right time. But I came back to it and something just... finally made sense. Didn't change what I was doing, I think my brain just needed the break.
If you're in that "this is pointless" phase right now, just keep going. It's not a sign you can't do it, it's basically a rite of passage. 89% wasn't what I expected walking out of there, I honestly thought I'd scraped a pass. The test isn't as brutal as the practice material makes it feel.
Honestly I almost quit around week 5. The weather section was killing me and I kept telling myself I wasn't cut out for this. Passed at 82% and I'm not even embarrassed about it because three weeks before the test I would've bet against myself finishing at all.
What kept me going was just showing up even when it felt pointless. Some days I'd sit down for my 30 minutes and retain literally nothing, but I still did it. If you're in that rough middle patch where nothing's clicking, don't bail -- it does start to come together. The sectional chart stuff felt impossible until suddenly it didn't. Just keep grinding it.