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| Junior Member | I'm a private pilot with 80 hours, starting to look ahead for my Instrument training and my instructor has suggested that my limited money might be best spent practicing maneuvers, approaches, and cross country time under the hood with a safety pilot before starting official training. Sounds great, but I would love a better understanding of the approaches and maneuvers before I even do that so Im looking for some good IFR study materials to help me get started from the basics. There are plenty of books and resources out there to pick from but Im on a limited budget and cant buy them all, so I'm looking for input on which ones you guys have thought to be the best. I'm looking for something that gives me an intro to IFR flying and a great jumpstart for flight training. Appreciate the help!
__________________ --Jordan Witherspoon |
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| | #2 |
| Old Skool | I like The Complete Advanced Pilot, I'm at the tail end of PPL looking ahead to my IFR and it was highly recommended to me. I also have the FAA all-white instrument rating book and that is pretty good.
__________________ "I have learned over the years that when one's mind is made up, that diminshes fear" - Rosa Parks |
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| | #3 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 104
| These free books will keep you busy for quite a while, (Also, all of them have been recently updated): Instrument Flying Handbook (2007): http://www.faa.gov/library/manuals/a...ying_handbook/ Instrument Prcedures Handbook (2007): http://www.faa.gov/library/manuals/a...ures_handbook/ (Look at the bottom and click Download complete IPH) Aviation Weather Services (2007, Brand spankin new): http://www.asa2fly.com/Aviation-Weat..._product1.aspx (Look on the right and download the whole book) Oh, also there is a good amount of info in the AIM: http://www.faa.gov/airports_airtraff...ns/ATpubs/AIM/ And regs (Specifically Part 91 Subpart B): http://www.risingup.com/fars/info/91-index.shtml Have fun. |
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| | #4 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Cleared for the ILS Rwy 4 Approach
Posts: 178
| I also reccomend some study software from Dauntless-- http://www.dauntless-soft.com/ It's pretty cheap (actually cost effective since it covers many tests) and will help you prepare for the written test. You could study, prepare for the test, take the test before you do the flight training so that you have a stronger background rather than do the ground and the flight training concurrently. It will make the practical portion smoother since you are building on what you've already learned. IMHO of course.... ![]() |
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| | #5 | |
| Old Skool Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: CFI / CFII in PA
Posts: 2,670
| Quote:
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| | #6 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Blacksburg
Posts: 68
| Thanks alot, good books to read. ![]() ![]()
__________________ Safe Flying SaberFlyer 37°13'48" North, 80°25'4" West |
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| | #7 |
| Old Skool Join Date: May 2006 Location: Live in Temple, TX - From Ithaca, NY - Wish I was on an island in Fiji
Posts: 1,912
| I just took my IFR written on Friday and got a 98. MIssed a simple question again to miss the 100 by one dangit! I used:
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| | #8 |
| Junior Member | Great information on this post!! I just received my Instrument and these books will be great to stay sharp ![]()
__________________ KA-BLAHHHH....FREEDOM!!!!!!!!!!! |
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| | #9 | |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Cleared for the ILS Rwy 4 Approach
Posts: 178
| Quote:
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| | #10 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 104
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| | #11 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Austin
Posts: 483
| Get the free FAA books. Your instrument rating is full of a ton of procedures and learning how to not mess yourself in the clouds. My recommendation: 1) Get the instrument flying handbook and instrument procedures handbook. 2) Fly with your CFII for at least 10 hours of basic instrument flying. 3) If you want to be really ambitious and your instructor feels you are ready, move onto holding, approaches, and en route procedures. a. Have your potential safety pilot ride along in the back so he knows what the heck is going on. b. Both of you can practice a crap ton on flight simulator to get the procedures down. c. Go out on VFR XC's with said safety pilot, only fly the routing and approaches just like you're going IFR. If you're going someplace unfamiliar, you might review the approaches with your instructor just to make sure you and your safety pilot don't crash into any towers, bust airspace, etc. 4) In the mean time, when the weather turns sour go out with your CFII for as much actual instrument time as you can possibly get. 5) Also in the mean time, study your butt off and continue to fly the procedures on flight sim. The FAA books will tell you everything you need to pass the checkride and be pretty decent flying IFR procedures, but read the other books too so you actually know how to make intelligent decisions. By the time you get your 50hrs PIC XC and 40 hours instrument time, you'll be pretty well on your way to wrapping things up. Just be extremely careful with your safety pilot and make sure he's not a tool.
__________________ Please help me in the fight against cancer by asking me about the Texas 4000 for Cancer or by visiting our website at http://www.texas4000.org/. |
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