Page 71 More Sources of Information
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Contents:

VOR Trainer; …Flight Planners; ...Checkrides; …Training; ...FAA Written Test; ...Practical Test Standards; ...Sources; ...Aircraft Information; ...Airports; ...Taxi Diagrams; ...Spins; ...Live Radio; ...Distances; ...Weather; ...Pilot Information; ...Time; ...FAA Sources; ...Charts; …Medical; …

VOR Trainer

http://www.visi.com/~mim/nav/

Java Based
http://www.visi.com/~mim/nav/

VOR navigation,
http://www.visi.com/~mim/nav/

Online vor tutorials
http://www.campbells.org/Airplanes/VOR/vor.html


http://www.visi.com/~mim/nav/

ASF RELEASES 2000 NALL REPORT
The AOPA Air Safety Foundation's 2000 Nall Report, an analysis of general aviation accidents that occurred in 1999, is now available. The report shows that GA's safety record has continued to improve. The estimated
accident rate is the lowest it's been since record keeping began in 1938. For a copy of the report, call 800/USA-AOPA or see AOPA Online
http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/00nall.pdf

Flight Planners
Sectionals for the whole country, flight planning, weather, online logbook, links, discussion areas, calculators - you name it. The only thing I use another site for is for filing flight plans, and they plan to have that soon. Even approach plates are coming!
http://www.aeroplanner.com
Webmaster of aeroplanner?
munsellm@my-deja.com
http://www.fltplan.com.
Flight Planner
www.flightplan.com or 1-800-515-6900

Flight Planning
www.aeroplanner.com

It is free. We are not charging or requiring e-mail addresses.
http://www.webexams.com

Flight Planning
http://www.fltplan.com/open.htm

The new IFR Flight Planning / Enroute form is available at
http://www.dauntless-soft.com (aka http://www.faatest.com)
 http://www.dauntless-soft.com/PRODUCTS/Freebies/VFRFlightPlanner/index.html

has a navigation log (called a "flight planning form")
(http://www.dauntless-soft.com)

Click on Planning, and look under 'Navigation Log'
http://www.geocities.com/sridhar007/flying.html

Best $100 I ever spent for planning)
www.digAV.com

ww w.airnav.com
for fuel costs.

http://www.faatest.com

http://www.deja.com/

I have an excel flight planner. Your instructor probably doesn't want you using the automatic part
http://home.att.net/~jm.price

Flight planning
http://www.aeroplanner.com is excellent

Gleim's website and download all the scanned charts (assuming : you *want* to download all the PDF images) then print them out for : your convenience while studying. Since the legend printed on the images : has the chart scale, you don't need to worry about the distances matching what's on your plotter. However, the compass will come in handy.

You can order the current booklet (FAA-CT-8080-2B?) from the US Government bookstore (in Kansas City since they others won't cooperate) for US$6.00 by calling 1-816-765-2256 from 10am to 9 pm Central Time. The title is "Computerised Testing Supplement for Recreational and Private Pilot". 

IFR Checkrides
Field Morey's West Coast Adventures 608 836-1711

See Wally Roberts's excellent IFR refresher articles
http://www.wallyroberts.com/articles/jul96.pdf

http://www.wallyroberts.com/articles/nov96.pdf

Full account of my checkride(s) are at
http://home.socal.rr.com/bakst/Flying.htm -

http://home.earthlink.net/~kbakst/Flying.htm
FAR knowledge for the upcoming checkride....
http://nasdac.faa.gov/internet/

I put a checklist on my instructor stuff page. Makes it easy to make sure the student has
everything necessary for the checkride...

(http://home.att.net/~jm.price/instructor.htm)

Don't forget there's a lot of other useful stuff on my general aviation page at

http://home.att.net/~jm.price/fly.htm

Training
http://roye.home.netcom.com/flyingTraining.htm

American Flyers site
http://www.americanflyers.net/chartroom/

FAA Instrument Training Handbook
http://avstop.com/AC/Instument/index.html

PPL groundschool online at
http://www.aviationspot.com

FAA Written Test:
Good site listing PPL exam questions...
http://www.flyppl.com

PPL groundschool online at
http://www.aviationspot.com

Site listing PPL exam questions...
http://www.flyppl.com

http://w3.one.net/~kip/faatest.html

http://www.avweb.com/articles/eyeofexp/eoe0002.html

http://w3.one.net/~kip/faatest.html

http://www.faatest.com

http://w3.one.net/~kip/faatest.html

www.stephenames.com/flying/flying.html

http://www.webexams.com

www.pilotpal.com

All the rest of the Airman Testing information is at
http://afs600.faa.gov./630.asp?sub=630&lev=Amn.

Practical Test Standards
Latest version of PTS
Getting Changes to Practical Test Standards
http://www.mmac.jccbi.gov/afs/afs600

The govt internet site that has the adobe downloadable PTS's
http://afs600.faa.gov/search.asp?myFolder=practicalteststandard&Query=&sub=630&lev=Amn&title=Practical+Test+Standards

There was a subtle change in the meaning of the white arc between the older and newer planes. http://www.omen.com/f/n2469r.html

www.mmac.jccbi.gov/afs/afs600/akt.html#pts

Latest changes in PTS
www.mmac.jccbi.gov/afs/afs600/akt.htm#rc

The FAA chose this one as a sample of their "plain language" AC initiative:
http://www.faa.gov/language/accold.pdf

The current test question banks are now available directly from the FAA here:

http://AFS600.faa.gov/search.asp?myFolder=airmanknowledge&Query=&sub=630&lev=Amn&title=Airman+Knowledge+Test+Item+Banks (Browser cookie support is required)

You may find some information here:
http://www.gleim.com/Aviation/Updates/

The CFI PTS is at
http://afs600.faa.gov/data/practicalteststandard/faa-s-8081-6a.pdf.

How People Learn, full text of book at
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309070368/html

Written Test Site
PilotPal.com.

Take a look at http://www.avweb.com/articles/eyeofexp/eoe0002.html for hints
on aceing the written.

Airnav allows you search within X miles of a given location for all airports that meet whatever criteria.... Go to:
http://www.airnav.com/airports/search.html

Sources

Airport Diagrams
Try http://www.airways.com/

These are in self-extracting zip format for each state, and are a mixture of
NACO taxi diagrams and state published diagrams.
http://www.razorsedgesoft.com/diagrams.htm

For UK airfields.
http://www.ais.org.uk/uk_aip/pdf/ad/aipad2.pdf

www.airnav.com for stops with reported fuel
www.aopa.org for airport and taxiway diagrams

Airport diagrams for anyone to download.

http://www.razorsedgesoft.com/diagrams.htm

About aviation formulas.
http://www.best.com/~williams/avform.html

Online source for the airplane flying handbook.
FAA-H-8083-3 (newest rev) or the older 61-21A book.
. http://avstop.com/AC/

Commenting on FAA notice of proposed rulemakings (NPRM's)
Click once on the ARM icon
Under 'Participating in FAA Rulemakikng, click once on the bullet entitled,
"Documents Open for Comments (NPRM's, Notices, Request for Comments)."
http://www.faa.gov/avr/armhome.htm

Historic Aviation books.
www.historicaviation.com

Good mountain flying info at
www.mountainflying.com

Lesson Plans
http://home.att.net/~jm.price

If you want to know where the identifiers are, just go to
http://www.airnav.com/airports
and enter the identifier in. It'll tell you where the airport is.

Feel free to copy it, use it, abuse it, etc. It does calculate things like night landings in last 90 days and other currency items. There is an MS-Excel logbook at
http://www.stanwyck.com/LogBook.xls

You may find it useful to invest around $20 on an Australian invented plotter (big country Australia and easy to get lost in) that solve the most troublesome aspects of visual navigation, off-course heading corrections and unexpected diversions.
http://www.pilot-navigation-aids.com.

For anyone interested in more information on optics for pilots, visit our website at www.shieldseyewear.com.

In our website
http://www.aeroplanner.com,
we store the 'actual' location surveyed in the database. The actual lat/lon for the airport.

Here's a good article on the topic of Scud Running:
http://www.avweb.com/articles/lounge/tpl0026.html

See for a most erudite discussion of the turn back to runway after engine failure.
http://web.usna.navy.mil/~dfr/possible.html

Cockpit Lights
This "Beam n Read can be ordered at the following site
http://www.std.com/asf1/BNR.html

I have a couple hundred hours night using a lip light, I wouldn't give mine up.
http://www.wings-aviation.com/LipLights.html

Light Sources
http://www.navaire.com
/

http://www.chiefaircraft.com

Live Radio links:

I strongly suggest that you listen to this conversation in its entirety
http://www.cyberair.com/tower/trans/displt.html

http://www.multiweb.net/~mdn/atc.html

http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Lab/2376/pghradio.html#SCANNERLINKS

http://realserver.brooklyn.cuny.edu:8080/ramgen/encoder/jfk.rm

http://www.deltahawks.org/

http://www.citeweb.net/airline/tower.htm

http://www.totavia.com/BCaviation/atc.htm

this one has a bunch on one site...

http://www.freeweb.pdq.net/dino/liveatc.htm

 Weather and Flying
www.aeroplanner.com
Try here for weather contractions:
http://www.awc-kc.noaa.gov/info/domestic_contractions.html

Weather site
http://adds.awc-kc.noaa.gov/projects/adds/index.html

www.awc-kc.noaa.gov/awc/aviation_weather_center.html

www.awc-kc.noaa.gov/awc/cwsu-corner.html

Engine Operation
www.lycoming.textron.com/support.

Dumb things that happen on the radio:
http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/callback_nf.htm#2000

If you want to know where the airport identifiers are, just go to
http://www.airnav.com/airports
and enter the identifier in. It'll tell you where the airport is.

Feel free to copy it, use it, abuse it, etc. It does calculate things like night landings in last 90 days and other currency items. There is an MS-Excel logbook at
http://www.stanwyck.com/LogBook.xls

Australian invented plotter that solve the most troublesome aspects of visual navigation, off-course heading corrections and unexpected diversions.
http://www.pilot-navigation-aids.com.

For anyone interested in more information on optics for pilots, visit our website at
www.shieldseyewear.com.

I put a checklist on my instructor stuff page. Makes it easy to make sure the student has
everything necessary for the checkride...
http://home.att.net/~jm.price/instructor.htm

Other useful stuff at
http://home.att.net/~jm.price/fly.htm

Rules of thumb
http://prestwick.simplenet.com/aviation/rulethmp.htm

http://www.flightinfo.com/html/rules_.shtm

Air sickness
Uses electric shock and relatively expensive. Good track record.
www.reliefband.com

I've created a PDF version of the navigation log form I used for planning cross-country flights. It's not exactly the "original" but it should serve it's purpose. Find it here:
http://www.remote.org/frederik/projects/aviation/navlog.html

Vibrating watch/timer
http://www.watchminder.com/ $80

http://www.dauntless-soft.com/PRODUCTS/index.html

MARV GOLDEN DISCOUNT SALES
http://www.avweb.com/sponsors/marvgold

Charts
http://mapbase.pair.com/

Palm Pilot
http://www.palmgear.com/
FREE Aviation Weather for Palm Pilot and PocketPC!!
http://www.cupitt.com

Here is a palm app I just found which basically puts the AF/D in your palm!
http://hotfiles.zdnet.com/cgi-bin/texis/swlib/hotfiles/info.html?fcode=001CM

IFR
Capt. Wally Roberts' most excellent site
www.terps.com

Cessna vs Piper
http://endeavor.med.nyu.edu/~roy/flying/cessna-archer.pdf

Coriolis effect
http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~dvandom/Edu/coriolis.html

15-20% of fatal stall/spin accidents occurred while dual instruction was being given.
http://www.richstowell.com/stalspin.htm

Aviation Fuel:
http://www.prime-mover.org/Engines/GArticles/octane.html

www.airnav.com has lat/long for all the airports in their database, and they
have most private airports.

A web site where some guy in Australia journaled most of his lessons. He was very humorous as well as detailed
It's called "Andrew's Aerodrome",
http://www.labyrinth.net.au/~apearce/ .
or
http://www.icct.net/~dyls/flying.html )

Professor Stephen W. Shure, Department of Aerospace Technology, Indiana State University at,
http://web.indstate.edu
U
rl is indstate.edu and hit the link to distance education and then to any of 6 courses I just put online- AST-141,143,241,243,245 and 441. Guest-guest gives entry

Try this web page it has a couple of handy files that provide a complete decoding guide.http://www.nws.noaa.gov/oso/oso1/oso12/metar.htm

The white light flashlight at:
http://www.photonlight.com/

Also one of the best downloadable/printable sources is "Aviation Weather Services AC 00-45E" which you can get from:
http://www.faa.gov/avr/afs/afs400/

If you are interested in Lycoming engines, consider this link from Lycoming: http://www.lycoming.textron.com/support/publications/do_not_use_automotive_gas_in_aircraft.html

www.partsbase.com
Auctions for everything aviation!

Breath of Life
White Mountain Products group
PO Box 95 Dyer Nevada 89010
$159.95 Oxygen kit.
www.wmountain.com

CCR Website
ccrairport.org

FAA contact for Lost Certificates:
405 954-3261

Aircraft Information
Plane & Pilot Magazine's on-line site has a lot of spec information:
http://www.planeandpilotmag.com/content/specs/index.html

Aircraft performance spreadsheet
http://www.1st-of-pryor.com/Performance1.htm

Trade-a-Plane has "spec sheets" that describe many of the various types at
http://www.trade-a-plane.com.

To find the owner of an aircraft by N number
http://www.avweb.com/toc/database.html (but you have to register)

http://www1.drive.net/evird.acgi$pass*6858102!_h-www.landings.com/_landings/pages/search.html 

1925/1935 aeroplane (England)
www.marmenor.es.org

his is the address:for cartoon aircraft
www.fsvo.com/caricatures

A MS Word checklist. For example,
For C152, click on, 5310H, then click on Files to Download
For C172, click on, 737WF then click on Files to Download
For PA28-161, 81024, then click on Files to Download
http://www.wvfc.org/aircraft.html

NOTE: For more details on how the STC worked,
<http://avweb.com/n/?06a>.

publishes the definitive, well perhaps the only, book on Magnetos).
http://www.sacskyranch.com/eng101.htm

Airports
Airport locations in
http://home.att.net/~rdluce/gps.html

http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~ivancich/airspace-matrix.html

Airports
It's the Civil Air Patrol's photo database.. very handy, although most of the pictures are a bit too "close" to help with spotting from a distance.
http://www.capnhq.gov/airfield/default.asp


Satellite pictures of airports
www.terraserver.com.

http://www.airnav.com/airports/

http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~un9v/atm/ase.html

http://www.ecn.purdue.edu/~laird/flying/flights/nearby_airports

http://www.aeroplanner.com

http://www.aerochart.com?

 They also have a Java pattern simulation that was interesting to look at
http://www.airparts.com/java/simulator.html

Taxi Diagrams
330 busiest airports with full-page diagram.
http://aopaa.org/asi/taxi

Microsoft's (free) TERRASERVER can be a big help with airport diagrams/pictures
http://terraserver.microsoft.com/image.asp?S=14&T=1&X=158&Y=1625&Z=10&W=2

http://terraserver.microsoft.com/image.asp?S=13&T=1&X=317&Y=3251&Z=10&W=2

www.faa.gov/asos/awos/htm
www.adds.awc-lkc.noaa.gov/project/adds/pireps
www.rap.ucar.edu/weather
www.dot.state.tx.us

Spins:
There are some video clips that have been around for a while in .avi format that show spins from the tail and the cockpit of a 152 trainer.
http://www.mindspring.com/~jjohnson14/vidclips.htm

Live Radio

AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL CENTER:
is a highly realistic simulation of actual sectors in the New York, Chicago and Los Angeles Enroute Air Traffic Control
facilities (ARTCC's). It fully simulates the current M-1 PVD radar consoles, as well as relevant components of the NAS
computer system. Very advanced AI emulates sophisticated pilot communications and behavior, fine-tuned by a real controller to carefully capture the nuances of real-world ATC.

From our main index page http://www.erols.com/tdg/ follow the (Yellow Push Buttons) link to STAR - our New Scenery Directory area. You'll find "ATCC" towards the bottom of the page. Enjoy!

Centennial Airport (APA) ATC feed at:

http://www.airparts.com/tower.html


Air Traffic Control Center is a highly realistic simulation of actual sectors in the New York, Chicago and Los Angeles
Enroute Air Traffic Control facilities (ARTCC's). It fully simulates the current M-1 PVD radar consoles, as well as
relevant components of the NAS computer system. Very advanced AI emulates sophisticated pilot communications and
behavior, fine-tuned by a real controller to carefully capture the nuances of real-world ATC.

From our main index page http://www.erols.com/tdg/ follow the (Yellow Push Buttons) link to STAR - our New Scenery Directory area. You'll find "ATCC" towards the bottom of the page. Enjoy!

ATC while on the Net...
http://www.erols.com/tdg
From our main index page follow the (yellow) push style buttons to: LINKS -

The Centennial Airport web site is at
http://www.centennial-airport.com/. photos of the runways useful while listening to the ATC feed.

Distances:
Tables for the lat/lon of my home airport, of both sunset/rise and twilight, from the US Naval Observatory http://aa.usno.navy.mil/AA/.

Distance of airports
www.landings.com

http://www.indo.com/distance
/

http://www.trump.net.au/airworthy/ or email me at:
airworthy@trump.net.au

http://www.mapblast.com/

http://www.ecn.purdue.edu/~laird/flying/flights/nearby_airports

Weather
A good website which talks about relative and absolute humidity, dewpoint, etc, is
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/whumcalc.htm.

Worked this dewpoint subject to the bone:
http://www.deja.com/viewthread.xp?AN=645452435

Now as you zoom around on our maps, we provide a link to the closest radar image!
http://www.aerochart.com/mapping/weather/index.cfm
http://www.boatchart.com/mapping/weather/index.cfm

I have a form available at the URL below, that I created when I call for a weather brief. It's in PDF format and so far, everyone that has given me feedback finds it useful.
http://www.wizardofdraws.com/wxbrief.html

Weather calculator for density altitude
www.srh.noaa.gov/elp
www.awc-kc.noaa.gov
www.accuweather.com
wwwl.nws.noaa.gov/
www.noaa.gov/
www.weather.com/homepage.html
wwwl.rainorshine.com/
ww2.weatherbug.com/aws
www.weather.com/aviation/maps/us_wind_cur

ASOS Explained.
:http://www.faa.gov/asos/faq.htm

Map with PIREPS
http://adds.awckc.noaa.gov/projects/adds/pireps

Eyewall of hurricane Hugo
http://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/hugo1.asp
through
http://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/hugo9.asp

You can get them at
http://www.awc-kc.noaa.gov/awc/aviation_weather_center.html

Also if you need a shareware program to plot up the METAR data on your PC, you might want to check out Digital
Atmosphere. It's at
http://www.weathergraphics.com/ .
www.faa.gov/awos/asos

www.nws.noaa.gov

wwwnrlmry.navy.mil/sat_products.html.

www.aopa.org/members/wx

www.cyberaair.csm/tower/faa/jtnn/student/chapter1.html

 All about AWOS
 http://www.tor.ec.gc.ca/readac/refguide/chap1e.htm

Pilot Information

Go to www.mountainflying.com and follow the links to Possum Creek.
How fast is your airplane?
www.reacomp.com

Go to www.inflightusa.com,click on "Features",and read "Slips With
Flaps-An In-Depth Look".
http://www.inflightusa.com/feature/o.features.1.html

The E6B
http://www.best.com/~williams/avform.htm .

There's a GPS manual and simulator here.\
http://www. The Control Vision GPS website is
http://www.controlvision.com

forvfr.com/download.htm



I have made a number of checklists available by clicking on my name and then clicking on aviation page.
http://www.mariash.com/familylinks.html

Oh, and this site has interesting stuff about ditching:
http://www.equipped.com/ditchingmyths.htm

Logbook Questions
www.propilot.com/doc

Certification Records
http://registry.faa.gov/airmen.htm

Go www.landings.com to search for "N" numbers or even certificated pilots.

Quiz on airport signage
www.faa.gov/ats/ato/ato102

Lapboard
http://eseelig.ms.nwu.edu/e-drive/flying/lapboard.gif

Electronic AFD is now available The data includes airports and navaids for the entire US and
its territories.
http://www.penguinair.com

Checklists for the PA28-180 and PA28-236 and weight and balance calculators for both to my web page. Also updated the IFR and VFR flight planners a little.
http://home.att.net/~jm.price

That "dang' flight computer?
http://home.cdsnet.net/~jessek/e6b.htm

General Info
http://www.pilotpointer.com/

Site that has the equations for wind correction angle, density altitude correction, etc.?
Try this: http://www.best.com/~williams/avform.htm

Web site with pictorials about angle of attack and stall.. -- animated.
http://www.diam.unige.it/~irro/lecture_e.html

Here's a really good tutorial.
http://www.campbells.org/Airplanes/VOR/vor.html

http://www.mindspring.com/~av8r1stop/index.html

"Pilot's Pocket Decoder" by Christopher J. Abbe. I bought it at a local Barnes and Noble book store for around $10. It has more acronyms in it than I will probably ever learn (the cover says "3,000+ Essential Entries").

Aviation flightplanning formulas on-line, by the way, the "Aviation Formulary",
http://www.best.com/~williams/avform.htm

The article is about landing on grass.
http://www.ais.org.uk/uk_aip/pdf/aic/4P120.pdf,
You'll need Adobe Acrobat to read it.

PDF format briefing also some PDF format checklists
http://www.mariash.com/cary.html
G
o to the aviation page and click on the passenger briefing link.

Landings
3-part series called "On Landings" some years ago. They're reprinted at
www.cyberair.com/tower/faa/app/index.html
Ground reference info:
http://www.avstop.com/AC/FlightTraingHandbook/Chapter11.html

Logging Time
There is an article on how to log time properly at:
http://www.studentpilot.net

Look under "Articles" in the left hand menu.

Log Books
This is a more basic one
http://www.flightlvl.com/
http://www.g-point.com/xpcity/fms2/
and
http://www.g-point.com/xpcity/logbook/

Equations
http://www.INFOequipt.com/ All the equations you need embedded in a nifty piece of hardware/software that fits in
your shirt pocket.
There are some on-line calculators available at
http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/HSG/RefCalculators.html
The calculators are listed alphabetically. There are 3 areas of interest to pilots: Aviation (general), Navigation/GPS, and Weather & Meteorology. I have not personally used these calculators, but have used this site for other purposes, and have found it useful. Thought I'd mention it...

Cockpit Resource Management Training books
703 487=4650
Teaching Text $17 Student text $23 

Protocol as on the Garmin 295. I am downloading the demo at. The cdrom is quoted at $49.00
www.razorsedgesoft.com/airplan.htm

This company also sells wireless GPS.
http://www.teletype.com

Endorsements
http://www.pilotinformation.com/endorse.html#Private%20Pilot%20Endorsements

All kinds of pictures of aircraft
http://www.planespotting.net/

The Aeronautical Information Manual at theAir Traffic's Publications Library home page. Also the Controller's Handbook, 7110.65, Notices to Airman publication, Air traffic Bulletins, etc.
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/.

FAA Advisory Circulars
http://www.faa.gov/avr/afs/acs/ac-idx.htm

Telling time
http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/anim

Check this out: http://greenwichmeantime.com/
You can find Zulu time at http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/what.html

Listing of status
( http://www.faa.gov/asos/asos.htm ).

or ( http://akweathercams.faa.gov/indexnew.htm ).

Incidentally, there's a nice map of world time zones at:
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/AA/faq/docs/world_tzones.html

FAA Sources

This site has a copy of the medical form.
http://www.leftseat.com/8500.htm

FAA Advisory Circulars
http://www.faa.gov/avr/afs/acs/ac-idx.htm

Accidents:
www.ntsb.gov/NTSB/Query.htm
http://nasdac.faa.gov/asp/asy_fids.asp

ASRS Form
http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov

Change of Address
http://registry.faa.gov/airmen.htm

Medical Information
www.cami.jccbi.gov
www.aviationmedicine.com

Practical Test Standards
www.faa.gov/profinfo.htm

FARs
www.faa.gov/avr/AFS/FARS/far_idx.htm

DE page:http://wmtalley.netpipeline.net .


Lost Certificate
Phone the FAA at 405 954-3261

Acronyms
Start with the AIM, http://www.faa.gov/ATPubs/AIM/AIMTOC.HTM.

Charts
http://www.aerochart.com/mapping/chart/chart.cfm?lat=42.07853583&lon=-76.09633306
IFR Approach Charts
Online ( http://www.aopa.org/members/airports/ ).

Airspace chart
http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~ivancich/flying/airspace-matrix.html
Chart reading
http://www.aerochart.com/mapping/chart/chart.cfm?lat=42.07853583&lon=-76.09633306

Approach Plates
http://edj.net/cgi-bin/echoplate.pl

Medical
From AOPA website at:
http://www.aopa.org/members/files/medical/medcert.html

The official FAA diabetic poop is here:
http://www.cami.jccbi.gov/AAM-300/insulin.html

http://www.aviationmedicine.com

More info from the AOPA website at
http://www.aopa.org/members/files/medical/diabetes.html

And one more link from AOPA at
http://www.aopa.org/members/files/medical/insulin.html

Knows the process that the FAA expects and can help your private physician provide the correct necessary information
to your AME so you can get your special issuance as quickly as possible.
Bob Borucki, MD, AME,
airdrbob@aol.com

.Members only section. Many anti-hypertensives are approved.
http://www.aopa.org/members/databases/medical/druglist.cfm

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