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-   -   Reading Material (https://www.pprune.org/professional-pilot-training-includes-ground-studies/410633-reading-material.html)

FlightDeckDave 30th March 2010 20:19

Reading Material
 
Hello,

Has anyone got any recommendations on a good book/s which teach the principles of flying right through to commercial jet flying? Something which basically covers the ATPL or equivalent. I need to refresh my knowledge for a possible upcoming job so any advice would be great.

I'm doing a search now, but its always worth asking on here anyway.

FDD

mcgoo 30th March 2010 20:26

Professional Pilot Studies by Phil Croucher

flyvirgin 30th March 2010 20:31

The PoF oxford book is really good, also their PPL cd-rom for pof is also really good, even for atpl brush up,
Cheers,
Flyvirgin,

whistling turtle 30th March 2010 21:35

''Aerodynamics for Naval Aviator's'' is a gold standard book and has been for many years - I don't know how true this is but I have heard it was used as the main reference for the JAA when they were putting together the Principles of Flight knowledge objectives and exam questions.

Regardless, an excellent book and can be obtained cheaply second-hand on Amazon.

FlightDeckDave 31st March 2010 07:55

Thanks for the replies guys, I've had a quick look at those books and they seem to be what I'm after. I forgot to specify that I need the knowledge for an engineering type job, do you know if they go into the specifics of how jet engines work, oil and temp pressures etc?

FDD

Genghis the Engineer 31st March 2010 11:03

If you are a professional Engineer, then you should presumably have a lot of that? But, any of the common ATPL guides will help, also Rolls Royce's book "The Jet Engine". Phil Croucher's book is useful, but more shallow than the CATS or Oxford equivalents which are one volume per subject.

For preference, I'd go for the CATS notes if you can get them, if not Oxford.


A favourite with universities teaching principles of flight to undergraduate Engineers now is Anderson's "Introduction to Flight", which I'd recommend highly.

G

Tom! 31st March 2010 12:26

I can recommend 'Fly the wing' by Jim Webb and 'The turbine pilot's flight manual' by Gregory Brown and Mark Holt. Both available from Amazon.


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