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#1
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Do the various downloadable handbooks from the FAA website, viz.
Aeronautical Information Manual, Airplane Flying Handbook, Instrument Flying Handbook, Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge and Aircraft Weight & Balance Handbook suffice as reading material for obtaining a CPL or are there other specific books? Thanks in advance, Ramapriya |
#2
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wrote in message
oups.com... Do the various downloadable handbooks from the FAA website, viz. Aeronautical Information Manual, Airplane Flying Handbook, Instrument Flying Handbook, Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge and Aircraft Weight & Balance Handbook suffice as reading material for obtaining a CPL or are there other specific books? No, those don't cover everything you'd want to know (or even for the Private Pilot certificate). Add to those the FARs, the applicable Practical Test Standards, the Aviation Weather Handbook, and the Aeronautical Chart Users Guide, along with perhaps some more that I've forgotten at the moment. Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators is another good reference. Assuming all those references are available (most are downloadable...the only one I believe isn't is the Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators), they are sufficient for some people. Other people learn better when the material is presented in a different way, and for those people there are a number of books written for that purpose. In a recent thread, Bill Kershner's books were mentioned; they remain among my favorite of all aviation training manuals, ever since I read his primary training student manual (the first aviation training book I ever read, loaned to me by a coworker when I was first learning to fly). Rod Machado has similar books, and both Kershner and Machado have a reputation for having an easy-going, conversational style. For something more text-book like, there are books from King Schools (John and Martha), Jeppesen, and ASA, among others. This is far from an exhaustive list, but it ought to give you a good start, whatever direction your "start" is taking you. ![]() Pete |
#3
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The best weather book for pilots is still Robert N. Buck's
WEATHER FLYING, but you will also need the FAA Aviation Weather and other texts. Buck tells you how to think about and fly weather, not how to decode the current charts and METARS. Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators is very nice IF you are a math major, it is unnecessary since the principles of aerodynamics are covered at the level required the books you mentioned. These comments are in addition to Peter's and intended for Ramapriya. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... | wrote in message | oups.com... | Do the various downloadable handbooks from the FAA website, viz. | Aeronautical Information Manual, Airplane Flying Handbook, Instrument | Flying Handbook, Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge and Aircraft Weight | & Balance Handbook suffice as reading material for obtaining a CPL or | are there other specific books? | | No, those don't cover everything you'd want to know (or even for the Private | Pilot certificate). | | Add to those the FARs, the applicable Practical Test Standards, the Aviation | Weather Handbook, and the Aeronautical Chart Users Guide, along with perhaps | some more that I've forgotten at the moment. Aerodynamics for Naval | Aviators is another good reference. | | Assuming all those references are available (most are downloadable...the | only one I believe isn't is the Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators), they are | sufficient for some people. Other people learn better when the material is | presented in a different way, and for those people there are a number of | books written for that purpose. In a recent thread, Bill Kershner's books | were mentioned; they remain among my favorite of all aviation training | manuals, ever since I read his primary training student manual (the first | aviation training book I ever read, loaned to me by a coworker when I was | first learning to fly). Rod Machado has similar books, and both Kershner | and Machado have a reputation for having an easy-going, conversational | style. For something more text-book like, there are books from King Schools | (John and Martha), Jeppesen, and ASA, among others. | | This is far from an exhaustive list, but it ought to give you a good start, | whatever direction your "start" is taking you. ![]() | | Pete | | |
#4
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Thanks so much, Pete.
Do you have a link for downloading the Wx Handbook and Aeronautical Chart Users Guide? I don't seem to find it. And no, this isn't for me, but for copying stuff onto a CD for a colleague's daughter who wants to do CPL back in India, where both fuel and flying are frightfully expensive. Although I've both Machado and Kershner, the only book I read and reread is the DP Davies book. So well-written ![]() Ramapriya Peter Duniho wrote: wrote in message oups.com... Do the various downloadable handbooks from the FAA website, viz. Aeronautical Information Manual, Airplane Flying Handbook, Instrument Flying Handbook, Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge and Aircraft Weight & Balance Handbook suffice as reading material for obtaining a CPL or are there other specific books? No, those don't cover everything you'd want to know (or even for the Private Pilot certificate). Add to those the FARs, the applicable Practical Test Standards, the Aviation Weather Handbook, and the Aeronautical Chart Users Guide, along with perhaps some more that I've forgotten at the moment. Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators is another good reference. Assuming all those references are available (most are downloadable...the only one I believe isn't is the Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators), they are sufficient for some people. Other people learn better when the material is presented in a different way, and for those people there are a number of books written for that purpose. In a recent thread, Bill Kershner's books were mentioned; they remain among my favorite of all aviation training manuals, ever since I read his primary training student manual (the first aviation training book I ever read, loaned to me by a coworker when I was first learning to fly). Rod Machado has similar books, and both Kershner and Machado have a reputation for having an easy-going, conversational style. For something more text-book like, there are books from King Schools (John and Martha), Jeppesen, and ASA, among others. This is far from an exhaustive list, but it ought to give you a good start, whatever direction your "start" is taking you. ![]() Pete |
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#6
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Although I've both Machado and Kershner, the only book I read and
reread is the DP Davies book. So well-written ![]() Unfortunately....Captain Davies excellent book has nothing to do with the Commercial Pilot Certificate. It is written more for the pilot who has already obtained an ATP certificate and is entering the big jet market for the first time. Bob Moore |
#7
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Bob Moore wrote:
Unfortunately....Captain Davies excellent book has nothing to do with the Commercial Pilot Certificate. It is written more for the pilot who has already obtained an ATP certificate and is entering the big jet market for the first time. Bob Moore So by Dud logic, my reading Davies should make me very plausible terrorist potential ![]() More frantic calls to the FBI on the way ![]() But Bob, on a serious note, there seems to be something alarmingly wrong with India's aviation teaching program. Read the following news item from yesterday: [Cite] Of the thousands of aspirants who wrote the theory exams for a commercial pilot's licence across the country in April, not a single one appears to have cleared all five subjects. And barely 10% have passed in two of the five subjects. The results were declared by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday. Not a single Mumbai candidate has cleared all the five subjects. Sources in Delhi said that only one student from the capital has cleared all five subjects. In Mumbai, 1,045 students registered for the exams but barely 50 managed to clear the air navigation subject, while about 120 got through air regulation. Just about a dozen or so students managed to clear air meteorology. "The failure rate has never been this high. Until last year, at least 30-40% of the students who gave their CPL exams could clear it,'' said an aviation source. [End cite] Terrible isn't it? ![]() Ramapriya |
#8
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![]() Terrible isn't it? ![]() The CPL and ATPL exams given in Europe (Asia?) are MUCH more comprehensive and difficult than are the corresponding knowledge tests given here in the USofA. I'm not sure that any of the USofA study books would prepare one for the European exams. Bob Moore |
#9
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Bob Moore wrote:
Terrible isn't it? ![]() The CPL and ATPL exams given in Europe (Asia?) are MUCH more comprehensive and difficult than are the corresponding knowledge tests given here in the USofA. I'm not sure that any of the USofA study books would prepare one for the European exams. Bob Moore Is it just me that thinks that had someone less senior written the above, you'd have been swamped by a slew of chauvinistic vitriol by now? ![]() Ramapriya |
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