TWO Aviation Handbooks combine into one book! Aviation Weather Services, Advisory Circular 00-45G, Change 1, is published jointly by the National Weather Service (NWS) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). AC 00-45G, Change 1, explains U.S. aviation weather products and services. It details the interpretation and application of advisories, coded weather reports, forecasts, observed and prognostic weather charts, and radar and satellite imagery. Product examples and explanations are taken primarily from the Aviation Weather Center’s Aviation Digital Data Service. Aviation Weather Services, Advisory Circular, AC 00-45G, Change 1, supersedes AC 00-45G. Chapters includes: AVIATION WEATHER SERVICE PROGRAM, NATIONAL OCEANIC and ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION (NOAA), FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION (FAA), DISSEMINATION of AVIATION WEATHER PRODUCTS, AVIATION WEATHER PRODUCT CLASSIFICATION AND POLICY, CLASSIFICATION of AVIATION WEATHER PRODUCTS, Types of AVIATION WEATHER INFORMATION, AVIATION ROUTINE WEATHER REPORTS (METAR) and AVIATION SELECTED SPECIAL WEATHER REPORTS (SPECI), METAR/SPECI Type and Frequency of Lightning, PILOT WEATHER REPORTS (PIREP), RADAR WEATHER REPORT (SD/ROB), RADAR AND SATELLITE IMAGERY, SATELLITE, GRAPHICAL OBSERVATIONS, SURFACE ANALYSIS CHARTS, FREEZING-LEVEL GRAPHICS, RADAR SUMMARY CHART, PRODUCTS FOR AVIATION HAZARDS, CENTER WEATHER ADVISORY (CWA), TROPICAL CYCLONES, VOLCANIC ASH ADVISORY PRODUCTS, TERMINAL AERODROME FORECAST, INTERNATIONAL AVIATION ROUTE FORECASTS, FORECAST CHARTS, LOW-LEVEL SIGNIFICANT WEATHER (SIGWX) CHARTS, HIGH-LEVEL SIGNIFICANT WEATHER, NATIONAL CONVECTIVE WEATHER FORECAST, CURRENT ICING PRODUCT, FORECAST ICING POTENTIAL, GRAPHICAL TURBULENCE GUIDANCE, METEOROLOGICAL IMPACT STATEMENT PLUS: The Airplane Flying Handbook is the official U.S. Government guide created by the Federal Aviation Administration designed as a technical manual to introduce basic pilot skills and knowledge that are essential for piloting airplanes. It provides information on transition to other airplanes and the operation of various airplane systems. This handbook will assist student pilots learning to fly airplanes. It is also beneficial to pilots who wish to improve their flying proficiency and aeronautical knowledge, those pilots preparing for additional certificates or ratings, and flight instructors engaged in the instruction of both student and certificated pilots. It introduces the future pilot to the realm of flight and provides information and guidance in the performance of procedures and maneuvers required for pilot certification. Illustrations very detailed and colorful. Chapter 1—Introduction to Flight Training, Chapter 2—Ground Operations, Chapter 3—Basic Flight Maneuvers, Chapter 4—Slow Flight, Stalls, and Spins, Chapter 5—Takeoff and Departure Climbs, Chapter 6—Ground Reference Maneuvers, Chapter 7—Airport Traffic Patterns, Chapter 8—Approaches and Landings, Chapter 9—Performance Maneuvers, Chapter 10—Night Operations, Chapter 11—Transition to Complex Airplanes, Chapter 12—Transition to Multiengine Airplanes, Chapter 13—Transition to Tailwheel Airplanes, Chapter 14—Transition to Turbopropeller Powered Airplanes, Chapter 15—Transition to Jet Powered Airplanes, Chapter 16—Emergency Procedures, & Glossary. This handbook supersedes FAA-H-8083-3, Airplane Flying Handbook, 1999. This handbook supersedes AC 61-9B, Pilot Transition Courses for Complex Single-Engine and Light Twin-Engine Airplanes, 1974; and portions of AC 61-10A, Private and Commercial Pilots Refresher Courses, 1972. This revision expands all technical subject areas from the previous edition, FAA-H-8083-3. It also incorporates new areas of safety concerns and technical information not previously covered.
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