![]() |
Learning general ATPL knowledge
I've been a pilot for over 6 years now. I miss those days when I was studying for my PPL IR CPL and I just absorb all that information taught in class. Right now my only source of reviewing are my planes manuals and some test reviewers (which only give you the answers to certain questions)
Im looking to go back to actually learning atpl theory and not just from test reviewers. Anyone have any suggestion where i can learn this? What would be the best App/website? Thank you |
Originally Posted by pilota320pilot
(Post 11416561)
I've been a pilot for over 6 years now. I miss those days when I was studying for my PPL IR CPL and I just absorb all that information taught in class. Right now my only source of reviewing are my planes manuals and some test reviewers (which only give you the answers to certain questions)
Im looking to go back to actually learning atpl theory and not just from test reviewers. Anyone have any suggestion where i can learn this? What would be the best App/website? Thank you Wouldn’t your time be better spent in the company manuals rather than memorising the number of fire extinguishers to be carried on a plane with 400-449 seats? |
I can recommend good reference texts in almost all areas of aeronautical engineering. What are you interested on? If you want a deep dive in the physics of lift generation, check out McLean's book "Understanding Aerodynamics".
I'd spend time reading "real" texts rather than ATPL theory which is pretty useless for anything other than passing those ATPL exams. |
Originally Posted by VariablePitchP
(Post 11416624)
Plenty of syllabus based books out there. But the industry is bank focussed because of how useless the information is.
Wouldn’t your time be better spent in the company manuals rather than memorising the number of fire extinguishers to be carried on a plane with 400-449 seats? |
Originally Posted by Central Scrutinizer
(Post 11416695)
I can recommend good reference texts in almost all areas of aeronautical engineering. What are you interested on? If you want a deep dive in the physics of lift generation, check out McLean's book "Understanding Aerodynamics".
I'd spend time reading "real" texts rather than ATPL theory which is pretty useless for anything other than passing those ATPL exams. |
|
Originally Posted by pilota320pilot
(Post 11416708)
this is a great start. I will check this out. Do you have other books containing information on specifics of an airfield, and maybe also a book about aviation meteorology?
Aviation Meteorology is a bit of an odd one. One of few areas where I also wish there was a "central reference" of information. It's a vast topic so need to find your own areas of interest. A lot of resources are online. You can check out the Smartcockpit library, Airbus series "Getting to Grips with...". ICAO Annex 3. The "International Cloud Atlas" by the WMO. WMO reference materials here: https://community.wmo.int/en/activit...-regs-guidance |
|
Here ya go...434 pages of fun reading. It'll keep you out of the bar until late afternoon:
https://www.faa.gov/regulations_poli.../00-80t-80.pdf |
AP3456 is a good read.
|
| All times are GMT. The time now is 08:39. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.