Showing posts with label flying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flying. Show all posts

Slipping the Surly Bonds: Great Quotations on Flight Review

Slipping the Surly Bonds: Great Quotations on Flight
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. . . and you won't want to land. As a pilot (SEL, gliders, hang gliders and paragliders) and a skydiver (D-454), I find this book to be absolutely delightful. Dave English has researched nearly one thousand quotations, divided them into 13 categories and brought the words to life in an exquisite hardcover book. This collection will delight every pilot and will make an EXCELLENT GIFT. DanPoynter@ParaPublishing.com

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From man's earliest expressions on the magic of flying to the chilling last words of some of aviation's giants, here's an utterly unique collection of 1,000 of the most memorable thoughts on flight down through the ages. Concisely capturing flying's special allure and excitement as well as its humor and tragedy, this power-packed anthology of quotations by Leonardo da Vinci, Lindbergh, Armstrong, Yeager, and hundreds of others amply illustrates why, as aviation pioneer Otto Lilienthal rhapsodized, "To fly is everything." (19981010)

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Private Pilot Test Prep 2005: Study and Prepare for the Recreational and Private Airplane, Helicopter, Gyroplane, Glider, Balloon, and Airship FAA Knowledge Exams (Test Prep series) Review

Private Pilot Test Prep 2005: Study and Prepare for the Recreational and Private Airplane, Helicopter, Gyroplane, Glider, Balloon, and Airship FAA Knowledge Exams (Test Prep series)
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I used the 2004 edition of this guide as my primary text to prepare for the written exam. As a test prep, it does a perfectly adequate job of preparing the student to pass the written exam. It is of course not a substitute for studying other material in order to become a safe and competent pilot, but that is not the purpose of this book.
This book (and repeated use of internet-based practice tests) enabled me to score a satisfying 100% on my written. You can't get a better recommendation than that.

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Applicants studying for the Private Pilot Knowledge Exam will find answers and explanations for every question in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) exam database in this guide. All of the more than 900 questions from the exam are arranged by subject category and are accompanied by specific study material. Each question is followed by the answer, an explanation of the answer, and a reference and subject code for further study in FAA materials. Basic aerodynamics, engine operation, flight instruments, performance, radio navigation, and meteorology are among the subjects covered.

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Fragments from Vietnam: Recollections of a Helicopter Pilot Review

Fragments from Vietnam: Recollections of a Helicopter Pilot
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Although not having served in Vietnam, I found the book's attention to details riveting and engrossing. While the "fragments" were short in length, they were packed with interesting and humorous accounts of people making the best of a difficult situation. Fragment 21 relates how disposing of captured weapons by the EOD unit turned into a hilarious prank for the pranksters but not the "victims." Fragment 15 about how the orphans of the war were treated with a little human kindness was especially moving. Once you read the entire book you'll want to go back and re-examine the Fragments in detail. An excellent read!

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Have you ever been in a museum and viewed an old, broken piece of pottery that had lain in a tomb for centuries? Although it was assembled carefully, you could not help but notice that many fragments were missing. Nonetheless, its form was easily recognizable, despite the missing shards.These are my stories. Fragments from Vietnam, compiled after many decades of lying in the dust of the tomb called Vietnam. Not all the fragments are here. Some are still missing or lay buried over there...where they should be.

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Private Pilot Test Prep 2010: Study and Prepare for the Recreational and Private Airplane, Helicopter, Gyroplane, Glider, Balloon, Airship, Powered ... FAA Knowledge Exams (Test Prep series) Review

Private Pilot Test Prep 2010: Study and Prepare for the Recreational and Private Airplane, Helicopter, Gyroplane, Glider, Balloon, Airship, Powered ... FAA Knowledge Exams (Test Prep series)
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This is a must have for anyone studying for there written pilot exam. It has all of the questions with explanations and answers.

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Applicants studying for the Private Pilot Knowledge Exam will find answers and explanations for every question in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) exam database in this guide. All of the more than 900 questions from the exam are arranged by subject category and are accompanied by specific study material. Each question is followed by the answer, an explanation, and a reference and subject code for further study in FAA materials. Basic aerodynamics, engine operation, flight instruments, performance, radio navigation, and meteorology are among the subjects covered.

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Flying With My Angel: Surviving Religion, Sex And Helicopters Review

Flying With My Angel: Surviving Religion, Sex And Helicopters
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This is a remarkably candid self portrait that begins in a bubble of leftover 19th century Australian outback. Latz has an unerring, inexhaustible drive to remake himself and a never-ending appetite for nurturing machinery. There's lots of drinking, lots of enticing girls, and lots of aircraft problems that summon his ingenious solutions. By testing himself at extremes, he passes through many incarnations, each time jettisoning the identity that others would like him to occupy. By far the hardest abandonment is leaving the religion of his parents, and all the visceral restrictions that go with it.
Graduating from cars to planes to helicopters, then to bigger and bigger helicopters, he redefines himself as if rising up a ladder a rung at a time. It's some sort of 20th century hunting and gathering whose principle he must have acquired from the aboriginal people he grew up with. Its momentum, however, leaves no time for contemplation and family life. The reckoning for all this comes when his wife leaves him.
The writing is spare and functional, like the life it describes. My wife and I both had the same reaction: we literally couldn't put it down. The flow of the book is addictive, and its honesty remarkable. The subtext is dancing with death, and escaping over and over again--with the uncanny implication that Latz has not escaped religion at all. He's simply redefined it through living. One cannot evade a spiritual dimension no matter how rationally and scientifically one lives. Some force which he calls an angel has cared for him, and now it's time to look around. There are rules to the universe and Latz, unknown to himself, finds that he plays by them--and the universe responds in kind.

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This is a captivating story of life in another century. It's a remarkable tale of desert and jungle survival, finding religion and losing faith, about discovering lust and finding love, about dying in aircraft accidents that didn't happen. It's an inspirational account of a man who set his goals in the sky and achieved them. His hard-working angel keeps saving him during his early travels and later while dodging hidden rocks in clouds. Then spears and gunfire in the third world. A must read true story.

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Private Pilot Manual Review

Private Pilot Manual
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I am a professional airline pilot, and log virtually all of my time in large, turbojet aircraft. I am also a current CFI, although I don't frequently exercise my Instructor privileges in single engine aircraft. Not long ago I was approached to assist in teaching a Private Pilot ground school and to do some tutoring on the side. I accepted more for the challenge than any other reason.
The selected text for the course was the "Private Pilot Manual" by Jeppesen Sanderson, and I must say that I was very impressed with the book. It is very complete and provides easy to comprehend explanations (normally with useful diagrams, charts, or photographs) that make learning relatively painless. It was an excellent refresher for me as well, as single engine VFR flying is not what I do on a daily basis anymore. I highly recommend this book to CFI's for their students, to any Private Pilot or Private Pilot candidate, or to any advanced pilot as a refresher of the basics.
The only complaints I have heard from students are in regard to the relatively high price of the book. My response is that this one book contains the best explanations of the most important concepts needed to pass your written, oral, and practical exams before becoming a Private Pilot, and is an excellent reference to be referred to in the days to come. Flying isn't cheap. Economy is a good thing, but you need to know when to skimp and when to spend. This book is an excellent investment.

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# items make-up the complete course

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A Pilot's Guide to Aircraft and Their Systems (General Aviation Reading series) Review

A Pilot's Guide to Aircraft and Their Systems (General Aviation Reading series)
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There are very little, if any, few diagrams and the explanations are given to you as though you already have a background with electricity and mechanical items. The sections you perceive to be full of information are probably only 3 pages in length. The diagrams are there to show you what the instruments looks like, but no indications on the diagram of how it would work. Not a book I would recommend to people who want to be in-depth about their systems and planes.

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Pilot-oriented rather than mechanic-oriented, this guide to aircraft systems is designed specifically to help general aviation pilots understand how aircraft systems work so that they can better use them in flight. In order to operate modern aircraft in the manner that the designers and manufacturers intend, pilots must understand what each handle or knob controls and must know what to expect from each system when it is employed. The understanding that pilots gain from this manual will help them enjoy their flying more and make them safer, more efficient aviators.

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Wings over Denali: A Photographic History of Aviation in Denali National Park Review

Wings over Denali: A Photographic History of Aviation in Denali National Park
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Bruce McAllister had done a wonderful job with this new book in his great series of pictorial books. All of his "WINGS " series are a must own for all of us interested in the North and the history of aviation. If your a sudent pilot or an old pro, this and all the books in the series are a must for your bookcase.
I also recommend another great read on northern aviation, FLYING NORTH SOUTH EAST AND WEST, by Captain Terry Reece
Flying North South East and West: Arctic to the Sahara

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Zigzag Men Review

Zigzag Men
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Read this book! If you were there, or know someone who was there, or want to know something about those who served in what became a long and unpopular war, Zigzag Men distills and conveys some basic truths about the often surreal character of the war in Vietnam. It was the end of the 1960s; authority questioned, dope smoked, sex casual and hair long. Although conscripts did much of the fighting, even professional soldiers questioned the purpose of the war.
Unlike any previous war, the young scouts of the Air Cavalry spent hours every day, from first to last light, within pistol shot of the enemy; often finding him only by the streak of the tracers from his machine guns. How dangerous was it? The scout ship on the book's cover in an OH-6; 1,434 were built and 842 crashed in Viet Nam. When they weren't flying these young men often found release in the Army's culture of heavy drinking; many smoked pot and some turned to drugs. Resentful troopers were sometimes so alienated that they used explosives to express their discontent.
Against this background the pilots in Zigzag Men come of age, fight, carouse, make friends and mourn the loss of them. The events described by Sherrer are fictional, but in essence they are true. They or something very like them happened to many soldiers of the period.
The words and actions of the characters also give a very real insight into the how a large organization, in this case the Army, can be so dysfunctional that it compromises its mission. The senior officers portrayed here capture that dysfunction in a very real way.
I must make a disclosure here. I was for a time a scout pilot in an air cavalry troop, although not the one in which Mr. Sherrer served. I was at Quan Loi and the other places mentioned in this novel and I remember seeing a scout ship with the zigzag man on the side. My year in Viet Nam was about the same period as that of the novel. The men who were there, both "lifers" and temps generally did their best at dangerous work that they know from the evening news would not get them a victory parade, but might well kill or injure them. Yet every character and every event in Sherrer's book called up a memory of something that I saw or heard.
I do not read much modern military fiction or history, but I recommend that those who do should add Zigzag Men to a short list that includes--
We Were Soldiers Once...and Young: Ia Drang - the Battle That Changed the War in Vietnam by Harold G. Moore
Catch-22: A Novel (Simon & Schuster Classics) by Joseph Heller
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque


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Zigzag Men captures the dark humor of an unruly cadre of loosely led, overworked helicopter pilots, reluctant warriors who commute into combat from a remote airfield in Vietnam, zigzagging over the jungle, around one another, and through the indelible intensity of war. Quan Loi is their staging-point for flight operations during the day and a disreputable haven for hardcore, drug-altered malcontents during the long hours of darkness. When Newbies arrive at Quan Loi, the inevitable friendships and animosities become amplified by exhausting hours of combat flying, followed by immoderate revelry, into a bizarre distortion of military life, where unlikely friendships, inconsolable grief, and surprising heroism are stirred into a unique and unexpected brew.--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Flights of Adventure Review

Flights of Adventure
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If the purpose of a good book is to transport readers to new worlds, Flights of Adventure succeeds many times over, leading a journey from Middle America to the Middle East, Africa, South America, and, ultimately, the South Pole.
Anyone with a bit of the flying bug, or even just a traveling jones, should find something to love about this book, which features ten memoirs, all related to flying but told from very different perspectives.
The stories include the reminiscences of a wing-walking acrobat; a pair of essays by a father and his daughter about his love of flying; and a surreal, humorous account penned by the passenger - some might say "unwitting accomplice" - of a novice pilot who faked his way into soloing an ill-conceived flight over the Sierras in search of a weeklong camping trip/rave party in the desert.
Several chapters offer first-hand accounts of historical events. Marion Stegeman Hodgson writes about her days flying with the WASPs (Women Airforce Service Pilots), a little-known but important corps of female pilots who flew non-combat missions during World War II under the direction of the US Army Air Forces. Other military and commercial pilots contribute tales of flying in various world hot spots - Somalia, Beirut in 1983, Colombia during the search for notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar - while retired Navy pilot Paul Derocher details the thrills and perils of three years in the world's coldest spot: Antarctica.
The pilots in Antarctica could only fly to the South Pole a few months out of the year, when the temperature "warmed up" to 65 degrees below zero - the temperature below which their aircraft couldn't operate. For those of us who don't consider 65 degrees above zero to be especially warm, the idea of flying, or doing anything for that matter, in a place so cold is difficult to imagine.
One amusing image from the chapter involves a group of curious penguins crowding around an aircraft while the crew scurries aboard and quickly closes the door so the penguins couldn't follow. Apparently, if given half a chance, the flightless birds would love to see what they're missing.


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Who hasn't daydreamed of soaring above a South American rainforest, landing a float plane on a pristine Alaskan lake, or piloting a commercial airliner? Flights Of Adventure introduces the exciting, often harrowing, lifestyles of fighter pilots, wingwalkers, and men and women who brave the elements in the most barren places on the planet. This is a collection of real-life adventures to stir the blood of anyone who loves aviation-stories that are touching, humorous, exciting, and often dangerous or miraculous. Flights Of Adventure is as close as you can get to experiencing aerial adventure while keeping your feet firmly planted on the ground.

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Helicopter Pilot (Action Seeker Handbooks) Review

Helicopter Pilot (Action Seeker Handbooks)
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I'm going to list one of the tags for this book under humor, because this book is hilarious! The lessons are simple and to-the-point, yet the topics are comprehensive. It is great for beginners and intermediate pilots. I was glad I got this book because it is such an informative reference book for learning to fly a helicopter, but also because of its humor.

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Action-Seeker Handbooks is an exciting new series set to satisfy the need for action, adventure, fantasy and facts amongst wannabe action heroes and young adrenaline junkies. Each title explores an aspirational, adrenaline-filled activity through a series of incredible scenarios, and will detail all the skills, equipment and qualities it takes to do them. But nitty-gritty information and no-nonsense diagrams which may appear straight at first glance, have dry humorous undertones to ensure that the books are a rip-roaring read. Ever found yourself hanging upside-down in a sinking helicopter and not known what to do? With Action-Seeker Handbooks you will learn how to handle the most extreme situations, get to grips with the most demanding of challenges, and become utterly ace at all manner of adrenalin-pumping activities: Deal with ditching, fly through a thunderstorm and extinguish a forest inferno (without wetting yourself once). So if youre addicted to adventure, eager for excitement and totally up for it (whatever the challenge), then take your courage in both hands and get ready for action! WARNING-READING THIS BOOK CAN MAKE NORMAL LIFE SEEM UNBEARABLY BORING

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Hunting Warbirds: The Obsessive Quest for the Lost Aircraft of World War II Review

Hunting Warbirds: The Obsessive Quest for the Lost Aircraft of World War II
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Author Hoffman did well in bringing the Kee Bird (B-29) renovate-to-fly story to the reader. His vivid character descriptions made one feel he was in a smoke filled, "expat" barroom alive with dreams and deals. However much like the Kee Bird herself, Mr. Hoffman's book failed to clear the runway and fly the reader to a satisfying landing. After the Kee Bird tale the author lapsed into a meandering style as he wrote of hohum tell-me-about-yourself visits with vintage aircraft collectors and relatively mundane (cf. the Kee Bird) aircraft recovery ops. Additionally, as noted by another reviewer, if you are a student of vintage aircraft you already know of the Hoffman tales via PBS, Discovey, and aeronautical periodicals.

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Thunderbird Lounge: An Aviator's Story About One Early Transportation Helicopter Company, Along With Its Sister Companies As They Paved the Way in What Was to Become "A Helicopter War" Review

Thunderbird Lounge: An Aviator's Story About One Early Transportation Helicopter Company, Along With Its Sister Companies As They Paved the Way in What Was to Become A Helicopter War
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Pi'-o-neer' a noun meaning: "One who goes before, preparing the way, for others to follow." There is no other way to define the original members of the 33rd Transportation Company (Light Helicopter)(CH21), except as pioneers in U.S. Army Aviation history! All original members of the 33rd left their families in the U.S. and quietly departed Ft. Ord, CA with their destination as-"unknown"! The move was classified as Top Secret and no one was able to tell anyone, including families, where they were going under penalty of court-martial. Vietnam was not classified as a combat zone in 1962, but as an advisory zone...but no one told the VC. Thunderbird Lounge is a very good historical book written by a man who experienced it all. 1LT Robert J. Brandt, a National Guard officer newly assigned, became the Commander of the 573rd Maintenance Detachment and, would be the only Commander of the 573rd Maintenance Detachment for the entire year.
The 33rd was originally to deploy to "unknown" locations in March of 1962. The orders were delayed and many of their helicopters were transferred to two other Transportation Companies (8th and 57th), which did deploy. Then the U.S. was scoured for low time CH-21's to replace the ones given up by the 33rd. The unit was again alerted to move in August of 1962. All aircraft and all other equipment finally departed for Hawaii by ship scheduled to stop in Hawaii to pick up the aircraft and equipment of a sister unit, the 81st, before continuing on. Then, the day before the main body of personnel was to depart Travis AFB, 1LT Brandt was diagnosed with pneumonia! After spending a night in the Ft. Ord hospital and receiving a massive dose of penicillin that led to a rapid improvement, Brandt convinced the Army doctor that he HAD to go with his unit the next day. Convinced by his improvement, the doctor loaded Brandt up with more penicillin and off he went. He recovered enroute with no ill effects.
The arrival at Tan So Nhut and Saigon was exactly as anyone who has been there remembers...a sensory shock and memorable! The year was 1962 and, Saigon was "unspoiled" by western influences; full of interesting foreign sights, sounds and smells. The USNS Croatan, carrying 40 cocooned helicopters and equipment, arrived within 48 hours, on schedule. Following unpacking, unwrapping and assembly, the 33rd's 20 CH-21s were flown to Tan So Nhut and ultimately to their new home on Bien Hoa airbase about 30 miles north of Saigon. The time was the monsoon season and no member of the unit had experienced the tropics or the problems the heat and moisture would ultimately bring to their aging CH-21 helicopters. The 33rd had arrived and "Wow", were the conditions primitive!
Throughout the remaining pages of Thunderbird Lounge, MG Brandt tells a complete story of the first year of the 33rd in Vietnam. People, places and incidents are described in very vivid detail. Almost every pilot is mentioned as well as many of the key enlisted men and NCO's. Using letters sent home to his wife along with the help of several comrades he is still in contact with, MG Brandt reconstructs many events that tell the story of their first year. Combat assaults, re-supply and medical evacuations are carried out in two aircraft flights because of engine and maintenance concerns. The red soil and extreme moisture conditions made maintenance of the CH-21 radial engines and wooden rotor blades very, very difficult. Brandt estimates that his engine shop rebuilt a CH-21 radial engine every 8 days! Thunderbird Lounge is a story of missions, maintenance and mayhem.
Never has a book been written after 40 years that is more complete with dates, names and locations. Every page is brimming with tales relating the many humorous incidents and events that made life in combat and the poor living conditions of Bien Hoa airbase bearable. Great photos are placed at the end of each chapter that compliment and highlight the people and incidents within the chapter. MG Brandt carefully remembers some of the sad events of the year, concluding with the loss of the first two 33rd pilots just after his returning home.
Thunderbird Lounge is truly a wonderful book. It tells a positive story about men as pioneers overcoming adversity, boredom and the enemy. Some of the participants may have seen things differently than MG Brandt, as he looks back after 40 years. However, no one can say he didn't tell it candidly, and fairly, as he saw it. After all, 40 years is a long time. 1962 was truly a time when real men pioneered the use of helicopters in combat and developed the textbooks for US Army Aviation airmobile operations. Those textbooks, as well as the lessons learned, were effectively used by thousands of pilots over the next 9 years in that "unknown" location so very far away.
Tom Payne
Sec/Treas
VHPA

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This book nails it! The author deftly documents the fears, frustrations, frolics and foibles of these pilots and crews as they endure their moment in the muck of 'the only war they had.' There is a movie in here somewhere. To quote the late commander of the unit, 'Good job Brandt'."Chief Warrant Officer Fredrick "Fox" P. Cullen, Jr.This is a story as seen through the eyes of one 1st Lieutenant Army aviator,during the early US military commitment to support the Republic of South Vietnam in its counter-insugency operations against North Vietnam's campaign to reunite Vietnam under communist rule. It depicts the daily life of these soldiers and aviation crew members as they went about proving the importance of the helicopter in modern warfare. Describes in detail how the helicopter was employed, puts you in the pilot's seat, death and humor, frustrations encountered, and a tribute to those soldiers and airmen who paid the ultimate price.

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Border Pilot Review

Border Pilot
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This is one of the most skillfully written books I've ever read. It manages to be down to earth, yet symbolic, allegorical, and gives the feeling that it is dealing with the subject that is beyond all human understanding. The prose is beautiful, the pacing is flawless, and the content as sharp as a knife blade.
I've read practically ever book on aviation that has received even the slightest recommendation -- perhaps more than 300 books. This is the best.
I've read many other books on other subjects. This ranks as one of the great ones. Buy the book and read it.

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Certified Flight Instructor Oral Exam Guide: The Comprehensive Guide to Prepare You for the FAA Oral Exam (Oral Exam Guide series) Review

Certified Flight Instructor Oral Exam Guide: The Comprehensive Guide to Prepare You for the FAA Oral Exam (Oral Exam Guide series)
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Like all the other books in the ASA Oral Exam Guide, the CFI book is a pretty good source for oral exam material. Also, in common with the other ASA guides, this one includes several Q&As related to specific, although unspecified aircraft (the Commercial exam guide was far worse in this regard). By this point though, anyone using the book should be able to recognize these questions and know the correct answers for the airplane that they are going to use for their check ride. Good, solid review, but not perfect. It is the most comprehensive single book on the market for oral prep: Give it a go, but supplement it with a review of all your other materials.

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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) administers oral as well as written exams for pilot certification and flight review. These exam guides teach applicants not only what to expect, but also how to exhibit subject mastery and confidence while under tough examiner scrutiny. In this series, the most consistent questions asked in each exam are provided in a question-and-answer format, with information sources for further study. Applicants facing the oral exams will benefit from the topics discussed and the further study materials provided, which have been updated to reflect important FAA regulatory, procedural, and training changes (including the newest Practical Test Standards). Also included is a new appendix in each book, a 'Practical Test Checklist' to help students keep track of required items and test-day details.

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Aviation Internet Directory: A Guide to the 500 Best Web Sites Review

Aviation Internet Directory: A Guide to the 500 Best Web Sites
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Probably the best categorized aviation directory, but not always the best aviation websites.
The popularity of websites seems not to count, it just has the biggest airlines, the biggest manufacturers etc.
The directory has pretty much everything about commercial aviation, but for example there is no military category.
You can find some real highlights, even in the long lists of "bookmarkables". Still...every webmaster can be proud when he finds his website in this reference.

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The critics raved about the author's previous edition: 'A real time saver. Catalogs the best aviation Web sites ...giving clever descriptions and evaluation' - "Flying" magazine. 'An excellent sampling of cyber information resources for pilots' - "Plane & Pilot" magazine. 'John Merry narrowed the field down to the best of the best to save you search time when browsing for aviation topics' - AOPA Pilot. Fly straight to aviation's best web sites! Pilot John Merry, author of the highly acclaimed "200 Best Aviation Web Sites" and "300 Best Aviation Web Sites" is back with "Aviation Internet Directory: A Guide to 500 Best Aviation Web Sites"! And he's done his homework. John's thousands of hours researching aviation Web sites - so you don't have to - takes you straight to the best. This directory steers you through the jungle of online aviation information to the quality sites that everyone in aviation will find useful and fascinating.You don't have to be a master Web-surfer to use this book: simple, clear instructions for online beginners are provided.You'll find exact addresses for the most useful and interesting aviation sites, helpful descriptions and quality ratings plus e-mail contacts. The listings are organized in nine helpful categories, including: Aviation Organizations; Weather Sites; Pilot Resources; Sales and Employment; Magazines and News; and, Weather Sites. Find those "hidden" gems, not easily found in search listings. Skip ultra-slow sites or those with unexpected fees and membership requirements. Know before you log on whether a site is worth your time. Unlock the wealth of great online aviation information with the "Aviation Internet Directory" and fly direct to the most desirable destinations in cyberspace.

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Nine Lives Of An Alaska Bush Pilot Review

Nine Lives Of An Alaska Bush Pilot
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I have been a military pilot for over 15 years, flying for 21. I bought Ken's book because I am switching to a career as a Helicopter Bush Pilot and hoped it may offer some useful insights. I certainly wasn't dissappointed!
Ken started flying floatplanes around Alaska's Panhandle way back in the '30's, and had a pretty good time of it too, by all accounts. Any budding floatplane pilots will certainly gain plenty from reading the book - perhaps even a few grey hairs! Consequently, when the first Helo hit town, Ken could see it's potential. He developed many of the procedures first hand for operating helicopters in the Alaskan Bush - much of it by trial and error, and more than a few narrow escapes. Nine lives? I reckon he burnt up more than that in the first chapter! Sometimes he was a bit lucky. For the most part it is apparent that his instincts, finely honed over time, practise, respect for mother nature and a real passion for what makes things fly (or NOT fly!), saved both his backside and his airframe MANY times.
What I didn't know when I bought the book was that Ken set up and grew TEMSCO Helicopters, from nothing. It thrives today and has thrived through the continued aviation 'bent' of both his son and now his grandson, the present boss of TEMSCO. Hat's off to that.
If you are considering getting into a career in the Bush, with fixed or fling-wing Ops, I would highly recommend this book. By the time you finish you will have a far greater appreciation of the risks (and rewards) of the job, the heartbreak in losing good friends to bad parts, respect for ALL flying operations, some fascinating techniques, and a significant insight into the employers point of view in a Bush-type, aviation company. It's entertaining, and if you are passionate about your flying, it is VERY easy to relate to.
Who knows, perhaps the knowledge gained from just one of the incidents in this book may save YOUR backside?!
Well Done Ken - really enjoyed the ride!

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Drawn to Alaska in search of Adventure in 1938, Ken Eichner found himself scratching out a living on the wooden streets of Ketchikan. Enraptured with aviation, Eichner soon followed his heart again, and scraped together the money for flying lessons. The result was one of Alaska's best-known rescue pilots, famous for taking a helicopter wherever it needed to go to save lives, often at the risk of his own. (352 pages, 4 maps, 128 photographs.)

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