Any Recommended Apps For A Student Pilot?

Khalid Aljehani

Filing Flight Plan
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KhalidAljehani
I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions on apps to help. I am a student pilot trying to get my private pilot license. All I have left is to schedule for a checkride and go fly but I am doubting my self and not confident with my inteligence.

Anything would help, Thanks!
 
Candy crush, clash of clans, something like that to periodically take your mind off it...
 
I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions on apps to help. I am a student pilot trying to get my private pilot license. All I have left is to schedule for a checkride and go fly but I am doubting my self and not confident with my inteligence.

Anything would help, Thanks!
As Huckster hints at, there isn't any particular app or apps that are going to help you prep for the checkride.

What does help is to get a large stack 3x5 note cards, a copy of the Airman Certification Standards, the FAR/AIM, PHAK, AFM, and other supporting materials. Then go through the ACS and look at each section and subsection for the part that says "Knowledge: The applicant demonstrates understanding of:" (click the thumbnail to see the full size)

Screen Shot 2019-04-02 at 11.26.46 PM.png

For each line, hand write the question on one side, and the answer from the appropriate reference on the other. Hand writing is highly recommended because it engages your memory center of the brain in more ways than just reading reading the question and answer pair a few times.

Once have gone through the entire ACS and built your deck of flash cards, now start working through them in the following manner
  1. First just read the question 2 or three times, and then the answer 2 or three times. Then set the card in the "discard pile" and move on to the next one.
  2. After you have done all the cards for one section of the ACS (such as "Pre-flight"), pick them back up and read the question out loud and the answer out loud. If you get the question correct, set in the "answered correct" pile. If you got it wrong, set it in the "answered incorrectly" pile. Complete the deck for that subsection.
  3. The ones you got incorrect, repeat 1 and 2 until you have no cards remaining.
  4. Now shuffle the cards, and do 2 and 3 for the subsection. By the end of this, you should be doing pretty good and have confidence you know the information. If there are any that you're still a bit sketchy on, mark the corner or edge with an orange or pink highlighter so you can find those cards easily for later review.
Repeat this for each of the sections in the ACS.

This large deck of cards can be something you can carry with you, so when you find yourself with a thirty minutes, an hour, or more, with nothing really planned, you can break them out and study a section or two.


Come the checkride, keep in mind that it won't be a rote question and answer session like you're studying was. The examiner will be leading a conversation about flight that is very scenario based.

So during the preflight part, the conversation could go like,
  • "Once you're a private pilot, what sort of things must you have with you when you go fly?"
  • And later, "As you do your preflight, you notice one of the position lights is burned out. How do you fix this?",
  • Then when discussing the flying scenario, "So, as we're flying along the flight plan I told you to prepare, we're passing over this airport. Tell me what we need to know about this."

Finally, required reading is "Captain Levy's Check Ride Advice" which I have copied in the next post.
 
Captain Levy’s Checkride Advice

1. Relax and enjoy it. Nationwide, about 90% of applicants pass on the first try, so look around and see if you think you’re as good as 9 out of 10 other students. Also, your instructor must maintain a pass rate of at least 80% to get his ticket renewed, so he’s not going to send you up unless he’s pretty darn sure you’ll pass – otherwise, he has to find four other people to pass to make up for you, and that’s not always easy.

2. Go over with your instructor the logbooks of the aircraft you're going to use the day BEFORE the checkride to make sure it's all in order (annual, transponder checks, ELT ops and battery, 100-hour if rented, etc.). If the airplane's paper busts, so do you. Run a sample W&B, too – get the examiner’s weight when you make the appointment. If you weigh 200, and so does the examiner, don’t show up with a C-152 with full tanks and a 350 lb available cabin load – examiners can’t waive max gross weight limits.

3. Relax.

4. Rest up and get a good night's sleep the night before. Don't stay up "cramming."

5. Relax.

6. Read carefully the ENTIRE PTS including all the introductory material. Use the checklist in the front to make sure you take all the stuff you need -- papers and equipment. And the examiner’s fee UP FRONT (too much chance a disgruntled applicant will refuse to pay afterward) in the form demanded by the examiner is a “required document” from a practical, if not FAA, standpoint.

7. Relax.

8. You’re going to make a big mistake somewhere. The examiner knows this will happen, and it doesn’t have to end the ride. What’s important is not whether you make a mistake, but how you deal with it – whether you recover and move on without letting it destroy your flying. Figure out where you are now, how to get to where you want to be, and then do what it takes to get there. That will save your checkride today and your butt later on.

9. Relax.

10. You're going to make some minor mistakes. Correct them yourself in a timely manner "so the outcome of the maneuver is never seriously in doubt" and you'll be OK. If you start to go high on your first steep turn and start a correction as you approach 100 feet high but top out at 110 high while making a smooth correction back to the requested altitude, don't sweat -- nail the next one and you'll pass with "flying colors" (a naval term, actually). If you see the maneuver will exceed parameters and not be smoothly recoverable, tell the examiner and knock it off before you go outside those parameters, and then re-initiate. That shows great sense, if not great skill, and judgement is the most critical item on the checkride.

11. Relax.

12. During the oral, you don’t have to answer from memory anything you’d have time to look up in reality. You never need to memorize and know everything. Categorize material as:

a. Things you must memorize (i.e. emergency procedures, radio calls, airspace, etc).
b. Things you must know or have reasonable understanding of (i.e. interpreting weather codes, non-critical regs).
c. Things you know about but can look up and will have time to look up on the ground.

(Thanks to Mark Bourdeaux for this categorization.) So if the examiner asks you about currency, it’s OK to open the FAR book to 61.56 and 61.57 and explain them to him. But make sure you know where the answer is without reading the whole FAR/AIM cover-to-cover. On the other hand, for stuff you’d have to know RIGHT NOW (e.g., best glide speed for engine failure, etc.), you’d best not stumble or stutter – know that stuff cold. Also, remember that the examiner will use the areas your knowledge test report says you missed as focus points in the oral, so study them extra thoroughly.

13. Relax.

14. Avoid this conversation:
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: I have a #2, a mechanical, a red one...
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: I also have an assortment of pens, and some highlighters...
Examiner - Q: Do you have a pencil?
Applicant - A: Yes.
Examiner - Thank you.
One of the hardest things to do when you’re nervous and pumped up is to shut up and answer the question. I've watched people talk themselves into a corner by incorrectly answering a question that was never asked, or by adding an incorrect appendix to the correct answer to the question that was. If the examiner wants more, he'll tell you.

15. Relax

16. Some questions are meant simply to test your knowledge, not your skill, even if they sound otherwise. If the examiner asks how far below the cloud deck you are, he is checking to see if you know the answer is “at least 500 feet,” not how good your depth perception is. He can’t tell any better than you can, and the only way to be sure is to climb up and see when you hit the bases, which for sure he won’t let you do.

17. Relax

18. Remember the first rule of Italian driving: "What's behind me is not important." Don't worry about how you did the last maneuver or question. If you didn't do it well enough, the examiner must notify you and terminate the checkride. If you are on the next one, forget the last one because it was good enough to pass. Focus on doing that next maneuver or answering the next question the best you can, because while it can still determine whether you pass or fail, the last one can’t anymore. If you get back to the office and he hasn't said you failed, smile to your friends as you walk in because you just passed.

19. Relax and enjoy your new license.


Ron Levy, ATP, CFI, Veteran of 11 license/rating checkrides, including 4 with FAA inspectors
 
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