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Richard Kenneth Reed 5th May 2020 06:59

PPL Ebooks
 
Hi, I am looking to study for my PPL and was wondering If anyone has any Ebooks they could share? Thanks

Richard Kenneth Reed 5th May 2020 11:11


Originally Posted by Discorde (Post 10773109)
Try 'Handling Light Aircraft' by Julien Evans. Good luck with the course.

Thank you. Is it advisable that I purchase a PPL study kit from Pooleys and use this as supplementary reading?

Genghis the Engineer 5th May 2020 20:18


Originally Posted by Richard Kenneth Reed (Post 10773142)
Thank you. Is it advisable that I purchase a PPL study kit from Pooleys and use this as supplementary reading?

No, don't buy a complete kit, buy the stuff you actually need - and there's a price premium for the complete kits, justified by inclusion of things like an overpriced and unnecessary flight bag.

There are two commonly used sets of books in the UK: Pooleys (originally written by Trevor Thom, then re-written by Peter Godwin) and AFE (written by Jeremy Pratt). Both are good, personally I regard the AFE books as better to learn from, and the Pooleys books as better for sources of reference. There is also an excellent, and much cheaper online course from CATS here: https://www.catsaviation.com/courses/ppl.html . Why do CATS basically give this away?, as a loss leader for their core business professional pilot courses: take advantage, they want you to.

If buying the books, the only one that changes significantly between editions is aviation law - everything else buy old copies on eBay and save yourself a lot of money. Similarly, an old second hand chart, right now, is fine for study purposes, and any flight planning equipment again, no harm in saving money by buying secondhand. But do have the latest air law book, whichever set you're using. The chart you want for study is almost certainly the CAA 1:500,000 VFR chart - they're about £16 new, many people will have old ones they don't want.

The "Flight Computer" that you'll need to learn, is known in the USA as an "E6B", and once you know that you'll find loads of online teaching material / YouTube videos / simulators, etc. that you can use as learning material. Don't get hung up on the subtle difference between models - they all work the same.

If you know what aeroplane type you will be learning on, then you should be able to find online manuals, for them - or ask on here and somebody will have a scanned copy.

Best of luck, it's a great journey.

G

Richard Kenneth Reed 6th May 2020 07:23


Originally Posted by Genghis the Engineer (Post 10773620)
No, don't buy a complete kit, buy the stuff you actually need - and there's a price premium for the complete kits, justified by inclusion of things like an overpriced and unnecessary flight bag.

There are two commonly used sets of books in the UK: Pooleys (originally written by Trevor Thom, then re-written by Peter Godwin) and AFE (written by Jeremy Pratt). Both are good, personally I regard the AFE books as better to learn from, and the Pooleys books as better for sources of reference. There is also an excellent, and much cheaper online course from CATS here: https://www.catsaviation.com/courses/ppl.html . Why do CATS basically give this away?, as a loss leader for their core business professional pilot courses: take advantage, they want you to.

If buying the books, the only one that changes significantly between editions is aviation law - everything else buy old copies on eBay and save yourself a lot of money. Similarly, an old second hand chart, right now, is fine for study purposes, and any flight planning equipment again, no harm in saving money by buying secondhand. But do have the latest air law book, whichever set you're using. The chart you want for study is almost certainly the CAA 1:500,000 VFR chart - they're about £16 new, many people will have old ones they don't want.

The "Flight Computer" that you'll need to learn, is known in the USA as an "E6B", and once you know that you'll find loads of online teaching material / YouTube videos / simulators, etc. that you can use as learning material. Don't get hung up on the subtle difference between models - they all work the same.

If you know what aeroplane type you will be learning on, then you should be able to find online manuals, for them - or ask on here and somebody will have a scanned copy.

Best of luck, it's a great journey.

G

Thank you for all this info - much appreciated!

Genghis the Engineer 6th May 2020 16:15

Further thought, if you want up to date charts, buy memorymap online,then you can buy electronic copies of the chart for £20. (It's what I do, then I print off the bits of chart I want for a given trip on the office printer.)

G


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