Reddit reviews Airplane Flying Handbook: ASA FAA-H-8083-3B
We found 3 Reddit comments about Airplane Flying Handbook: ASA FAA-H-8083-3B. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
Effective 2016352 pages
We found 3 Reddit comments about Airplane Flying Handbook: ASA FAA-H-8083-3B. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
I would highly recommend the Airplane Flying Handbook. It changed the way I flight simmed!
Keep in mind all the information you need to pass is available for free from the FAA. But I like having the books and in the grand scheme of things they're really cheap. The FARs are the regulations you need to know, mostly parts 61 and 91. The AIM has a ton of good information in it as well. All stuff that could show up on your written exam. The PHAK is going to be where a lot of your written material comes from. If you know the information in there forwards and backwards you'll do great.
The ACS is the practical standards to which you'll be judged on the check ride. How close do you need to hold altitude? How close do you need to hold that 45 degree bank angle? All found in the ACS.
The Oral Exam Guide's usefulness will vary based on who gives you your checkride. My DPE literally flipped through his copy of one and picked a few questions out of each section to ask me. If I messed up he stayed in that section longer. If I answered a handful near perfectly that section was done.
> line is a bear for me. I can't sit in one place for awhile, so even at home, reading on a laptop that gets hot is killer. I'll spend the money for the print.
ASA publishes the print versions, here's the lazy-link: PHAK, AFH, and the FAR/AIM but it looks like the Gleim kit already has that one.