Flight Training

Five Crosswind Traps

This article originally appeared in Aviation Safety, Jun. 2005. When the spring and summer flying season returns in a few months, many general aviation pilots will realize they haven’t flown much during the winter. As a result, they usually have lost some of the skills honed during the previous year’s flying season.Up to a point, […]

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Your IFR Moments

This article originally appeared in IFR magazine, May 2005. IFR magazine asked its readers to contribute defining moments of IFR flying. Here are a few where the moment was made by the company as much as the flight. Tanks for the Help I rotated among all three CFIIs at a small flight school near Philadelphia, […]

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Microsoft Flight Simulator X for Pilots: Chapter 13 — Weather

[Editor’s Note: Recently two flight instructors wrote a book on how to use Microsoft Flight Simulator X (FSX) to enhance pilot training and to provide sim-only pilots a guide to making their flying more realistic. AVweb will publish several chapters from this book, beginning with this chapter on weather. To download the FSX files they […]

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Spins Without Fear

This article originally appeared in Aviation Safety, Mar. 2005. A little anxiety is perfectly normal when an airplane begins rotating toward the ground in a 60-degree nose-down attitude. But the thought of spin training need not cause you to break out in a cold sweat. In fact, many pilots find that the actual spin experience, […]

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Defensive IFR

This article originally appeared in Aviation Safety, Feb. 2005. Controllers are just like pilots: All are human and make mistakes. Most are good, know the rules, do everything they can to make your flight efficient and safe, and make sensible judgments. Only a tiny fraction are highly paid chair-warmers too lazy or bored to have […]

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Busted: What Now?

This article originally appeared in IFR magazine, Feb. 2005. You are IFR and solidly in the clag; the terminal area is busy and Departure Control sounds like a tobacco auctioneer. You are flying single pilot, trying to comply with the eparture clearance but beginning to have a hard time keeping up with the airplane. Your […]

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Pilot Workshop #3: Improving Rudder Skills

Rudder pedals are not meant to be footrests. In this 15 minute workshop, Wally Moran explains the importance of good rudder skills and how proper coordination improves safety, performance and passenger comfort. You will learn: Problems? See the FAQ below. More online Pilot Workshops are available here. Frequently Asked Questions Trouble viewing the video? Here […]

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Two New Backcountry Flyers From Expedition Aircraft

A company in Canada is working on a pair of beefy new single-engine backcountry aircraft that should be certified soon. Expedition Aircraft of Toronto said on Wednesday that both of its multi-mission aircraft, the E350 and the E350XC, have already completed 90 percent of the work required to obtain certification. Both aircraft will be powered […]

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