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Affordable Flight Training
Jul 12 2014Introductory Flights
Take an introductory flight on any of our airplanes, typically lasting from one hour to however long you would like. You will get a guided tour of the airplane and its controls before taking off for a short flight around the airport or further afield. You will have the opportunity to fly the airplane yourself, under the watchful eye of one of our experienced flight instructors. We also offer introductory aerobatic flights.
Ongoing Training
AeroDynamic Aviation also offers ongoing flight training for higher level ratings: Instrument Rating, Commercial Pilot, Multi-Engine Rating, ATP, CFI, CFII, MEI, tailwheel and aerobatic flight training. We also perform flight reviews, instrument proficiency checks, mountain flight training, FAA Wings program training, whether in our airplanes or yours. Please contact us for details.
See a full list of courses on our Flight Training page!
Need to polish up your knowledge? Intensive checkride and test prep ground school coming up April 26/27
Apr 12 2014 Need to polish up your knowledge before your checkride or knowledge test? Nervous about the oral test? Just want to learn more?Keep the last weekend in April free, we have just the deal for you!
Coby Sena and Jen Delp-Mallet will be offering an intensive checkride / test preparation ground school on the weekend of April 26th and 27th, at Reid Hillview.
Two full days of amazing instruction. Coby is also the local Civil Air Patrol check pilot (and former Squadron Commander), and Jen is a former airline pilot, rated in several jets and turboprops.
If they cannot get you ready for your tests, noone can, so come and sign up now!
Only $249 for the two days (9-5) and AeroDynamic will give you a $50 credit on your flying account when you pass your knowledge test (or if you already did that, when you pass your flight test)
Call the office on 408-320-9614 or email office@aerodynamicaviation.com for more
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AirPooler – Lyft for airplanes? Or how to win a free T-shirt
Apr 05 2014Here is an interesting piece of news. AirPooler is trying to do for private planes what Lyft or similar carsharing sites have done for cars.
I am taking guesses for how long they survive till the FAA shuts them down. The person who guesses the number of days correctly gets a free T Shirt.
Meanwhile try to list the various regulations that would be broken…
Excerpt from their announcement:
Here’s how AirPooler works. Pilots choose a date and itinerary for a trip, say Palo Alto airport to South Lake Tahoe. They enter the type of plane, the number of available seats, and their pilot’s credentials and experience. AirPooler calculates the price per seat by dividing the total flight’s fuel, airport tax, and hangar cost by the number of passengers (pilot included). AirPooler lists the available seats and accompanying info on its site, and anyone can book a spot.
Passengers choose from the available flights, enter their weight plus luggage, and a request is sent to the pilot. Once a pilot accepts, the passenger receives contact and arrival details for meeting the pilot at the airport. After the flight, any unforseen costs such as fuel for idling on the runway are added, and the passenger’s payment details on file are charged.
Law prohibits private pilots from profiting from passengers so you only pay for your share of the cost of the flight plus a 20 percent fee to AirPooler. The Federal Aviation Administration also bars private plane pilots from advertising flights, which is why AirPooler is careful to never promote any specific flights.
For more see http://techcrunch.com/2014/04/02/airpooler/
FAA Computer Testing Supplement Update (From Gleim)
Feb 09 2014Gleim Pilot community,
As you may know, some of the figures on the FAA Knowledge Tests have been used without revision for decades and therefore look outdated. Fortunately for future students, the FAA is in the process of updating these figures. Gleim applauds this refinement, and we want to disseminate what we know about the FAA’s progress so that you and your colleagues can be more effective in preparing and passing the FAA Pilot Knowledge Tests.
The FAA originally planned to release and begin testing with improved color figures for most of the Knowledge Tests on February 10, 2014. However, the FAA announced last week that only 2 new FAA Computer Testing Supplements are going to be effective on Monday, February 10th: (1) Sport Pilot, Recreational Pilot, and Private Pilot, and (2) Addendum A Computer Testing Supplement for Instrument.
How have the figures changed?
The FAA made every effort to keep the figures largely the same, with changes only for readability/enhanced aesthetics. Unfortunately, the Sport Pilot, Recreational Pilot, and Private Pilot Computer Testing Supplement was not easy for the FAA to update into color. For example, some figures are excerpts from Sectional Charts showing geographical areas with new landmarks. In some cases, airports have been renamed or even closed. Moreover, some Airport Facility Directory pages have changed due to alterations at the respective airports over the years, such as lengthened runways or additional taxiways. In addition to these aesthetic changes, all of the Sport Pilot figure numbers have changed because Sport Pilot now shares the same Computer Testing Supplement with Private.
What does this mean?
Some of the figure changes mandated edits to the associated questions so accuracy and viability could be maintained. However, if we look at the big picture of how those changes will affect students, the impact is minimal. For example, the symbols for airports and Class C airspace are the same. Frequencies may have changed, but their placement on a sectional chart has not changed. In one instance, Dallas Red Bird airport has become Dallas Executive airport. In this case, a student confident in his/her ability to read a Sectional Chart would simply note that the airport is now referred to as “Dallas Executive” instead of “Dallas Red Bird.” In this manner, almost all of the changes are not the kind that will trip up a Gleim student who has studied according to our plan.
What does Addendum A mean for Instrument?
Addendum A for Instrument consists of 105 new figures (Figures 155 – 253). Five of the figures are similar (for example, they may have the same approach or airport facility directory) to the current Instrument Computer Testing Supplement. There are no FAA-released questions associated with these 105 new figures. So, an Instrument student may encounter a question associated with the new figures, but the question will not test a new topic. Rather, a new question of this kind could be considered a parallel question to a current question in the Gleim materials. In other words, if a student understands how to answer a glide slope question for ILS RWY 12L at Des Moines INTL (DSM) (Figure 118), then (s)he should be able to answer a similar glide slope question for ILS or LOC RWY 36 OSHKOSH/WITTMAN RGNL (OSH) (Figure 252).
Is Gleim providing an update to its courses and books?
YES! Our online courses (OGS and Test Prep Online) will be updated by mid-February, and PDF updates for our books are already available at http://www.gleim.com/updates.
Where can I find the new FAA Computer Testing Supplements?
Following are clickable links for each new Computer Testing Supplement that will be testable beginning February 10.
Title: Instrument Rating Addendum A
URL:
Total Pages: 107
File Size: 21.04MB
Title: Sport, Recreational, and Private Pilot
URL:
Total Pages: 118
File Size: 35.44MB
——————————-
Garrett Gleim
Vice President
Gleim Publications, Inc
Phone: 352.375.0772
Fax: 352.375.6940
garrett@gleim.com
New Private Pilot – Zinnia Kilkenny
Jul 19 2013We have a newly minted aviatrix in our midst!
Congratulations to Zinnia Kilkenny who aced her Private Pilot checkride in Citabria 9091L. The skies will never be the same again.
Well done Zinnia, and instructors, Rimas, Jim, Sergey and Sherry.
New Private Pilot: Reza Zadeh
Mar 25 2013We have a new Private Pilot in our midst. Reza Zadeh earned his certificate from Examiner Sherry Diamond, after flight training with AeroDynamic Instructor Grainne Gilvarry.
Spot Landing prize for AeroDynamic Instructor Mark Guerrero
Mar 18 2013Congratulations to AeroDynamic Flight Instructor Mark Guerrero who landed second prize in the spot landing contest at Columbia Airport (O22) at the weekend, in a Cessna 195.
Thanks to Jan Johnson whose plane it was and who is getting checked out in her new plane by Mark
Well Done Mark!
Women in Aviation: Katarina Matanović, First Croatian Female Pilot
Mar 08 2013March 8th is the International Women’s Day, and so it seems appropriate to remember a woman in aviation. There are many well known female pilots, starting with Harriet Quimby who was the very first woman in the US to receive a pilot license. Today, we commemorate the first Croatian female pilot, born this month a hundred years ago.
Katarina Matanović was born in March 1913 in what was then the Croatian province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. When she saw an advert about a pilot school opening in Zagreb in 1935, that was it for her. She enrolled and received her pilot certificate the next year, becoming the first Croatian (and Yugoslav) female pilot.
Not satisfied with simple flying, she also became the first Yugoslav woman to sky-dive, and an acomplished sky-diver. She performed as a pilot and as a sky-diver and became a well-known attraction at airshows around the country.
At the outbreak of the Second World War she became a Liutenant in the Croatian Air Force flying the Avia FL-3 liaison airplane. During the war, in 1944 she lost her husband, also a pilot, shot down by the Allies, and a few days later she herself was injured in the British bombing of Zagreb.
After the Second World War, the Communist authorities in Yugoslavia were not greatly keen on her since she fought on the losing side, and she slipped into obscurity. However when Croatia became independent again, she was remembered, awarded a service medal, became an honorary member of the Zagreb Aeroklub and finally given the recognition she deserved for her achievements in such a male-dominated field.
Katarina died in April 2003.
See also Wikipedia article on Katarina Matanović and a more detailed biography (in Croatian)
Going Solo: Cheynne Lishman
Feb 28 2013Another fledgling leaves the nest! Congratulations to Cheynne Lishman who soloed Cessna 61637 under CFI Godfrey Watson’s anxious gaze.
Well done to Cheynne and his CFI Godfrey.
News: Planning to use GPS near Las Vegas? Check this out…
Feb 22 2013FLIGHT ADVISORY
GPS Testing
NAFC GPS 13-04
February 26, 2013 – March 15, 2013
Las Vegas, NV
Please access the link below to download the complete advisory:
https://www.faasafety.gov/files/notices/2013/Feb/NAFC_13-04_GPS_Flight_Advisory.pdf