Meredith gives a down-to-earth, easy to understand explanation of how to use ForeFlight for real-world VFR flight planning. #vfr #studentpilot #foreflight
Пікірлер: 64
@HolladayAviation9 ай бұрын
One thing to note is that for brevity I didn’t fill out the entire paper nav log completely… clearly you would want to finish the job by calculating the ETE for each leg and the total fuel required for the trip, plus a one-hour reserve. I’m glad so many of you are enjoying this video and finding it helpful!
@user-ej9jq2zf1y8 ай бұрын
I really like her attitude and her practicality and no nonsense flying wisdom! Use the tools that you have to remain coherent to your location geographically!!! Pro using GPS to track where you are located!
@MarionBlair8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip on measuring using two hands. I never could get it with one hand. Great tip!
@SteelTallon9 ай бұрын
Wonderful video. I just did my dual cross country last Friday. Working on my solo x country now. I use foreflight and paper. Learned some good tips from this. Thank you
@PedroyEnid9 ай бұрын
Great videoMeredith! I learned a few tricks for my bag of tools to be used on my next XC. Be safe!
@CrIsTiNaMaRiiE28 күн бұрын
Very good video! thanks!
@MrBluesman7777 ай бұрын
Great job explaining this.much appreciated thank you
@daverowe27914 ай бұрын
Great presentation! Thank you!
@robsteal38875 ай бұрын
Closer to your take off airport was an isogonic line of 7 degrees west, so even closer to your plotter number lol Not that it matters, great hack in Foreflight, thanks for showing that and loved the video. This really helped me a lot. I'll be browsing through the rest of your videos now.
@mitchellmimier50048 ай бұрын
I like your appreciation and acceptance of the technology/GPS/Foreflight, but I gotta say, I did your E6B wind correction angle calculation in about 6 seconds on the CX-3. 🙂 Great video, I definitely learned some helpful tips! Looking forward to watching more of your videos!
@InboundwithEcho6 ай бұрын
I have only 3 words: Wow!!! Thank you!
@vincedenimarck64989 ай бұрын
Enjoyed your video, Even an old pilot is always learning thanks for sharing ....
@juangabrielalumaluxuryreal64704 ай бұрын
Love your video. So detailed. I needed this for my commercial checkride in 2 days! I subscribed
@onetime56409 ай бұрын
Thank you , I learned a lot from your video !
@shyamsasidharan1Ай бұрын
Loved it!
@badgerfishinski6857Ай бұрын
I am so happy you mentioned this! Thank you Meredith.. My take on it ... Reality Check: You at the very least need to aligned your HI with Magnetic Compass ... And you must do it frequently. Without the magnetic compass, the HI is useless. Im talking steam gauge here. ..
@richardbonander15075 ай бұрын
Very good instruction. Thank you
@armeborj8 ай бұрын
Thanks very helpful!
@hankponcelet69618 ай бұрын
Very well explained
@elewinski3 ай бұрын
Great video! Sometimes the “along track offset” is useful to add waypoints without the course changes. But thank you for teaching me a better way to teach this.
@thatdavidsonguy9 ай бұрын
Great video. Just subscribed!
@stevehammond74859 ай бұрын
Great video. I enjoyed your commonsense approach to the topic.
@HolladayAviation9 ай бұрын
Thank you. I know there are some CFIs who think electronic devices are inappropriate for student pilots, however I am aware that many students fly well equipped aircraft and it’s unrealistic to ignore what’s on the panel. It’s not the technology that causes inattention, it’s students who lack the self discipline to use the technology responsibly.
@HolladayAviation9 ай бұрын
This afternoon I delivered a ground lesson on the topic to a student pilot who is a busy working husband and father who is struggling to find the time to study airspace, etc. In our example, we planned a trip from KCRG to KGNV which takes you through the Camp Blanding restricted areas. I showed him how he could go direct (plan A) but if they’re hot, make another nav log (plan B) which follows major roads. Have both nav logs available and if ATC says they’re cold, use plan A, if they say they’re hot, use plan B. I like to show students how they can take charge of these situations with just a little more advance planning using common sense.
@djwashx8 ай бұрын
I'm sure you're a excellent cfi great video just subscribed!!!!!!
@ViktorBludov5 ай бұрын
Thank you
@kswman14 ай бұрын
Love the pilotage instruction. I fly from WV. People ask me how far you been, ever been to Florida? How do you get there? I used to tell them I flew approximately due east and when I saw the ocean I turned right!! really?? LOL
@mccluskey28698 ай бұрын
Thanks Meredith. I’m a CFI in Tallahassee and have appreciated the content you provide. I’m glad there are flight schools like yours out there. I stumbled across a hack for finding the magnetic course awhile back. A quick tap on the magenta line will display the course without having to change the ETD. Thanks again and I’ll look forward to more videos.
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
Appreciate it! Yep that works too, but I like students to see the backlog change from HDG to CRS when winds aloft are eliminated so they make the connection.
@Jeffopar4 ай бұрын
I would love to chat with you about that route on the wall. I would like to do do something similar.
@RonSchwoyer3 ай бұрын
LNS! I flew to that field many times!
@jantonitis8 ай бұрын
Hi Meredith. Great video! There is a way to name waypoints in Foreflight. Press-and-hold on a map location like you did in the video... but instead of tapping on the GPS coordinates to add it to the flight plan... press 'more', then 'save'. The 'name' field in the box that pops up is editable... so you can name it 'Abeam NAS' or whatever you want. The custom waypoint name does appear in the navlog. The downside to this approach is these saved waypoints stick around.... so your chart might get cluttered with user-defined waypoints.
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
Interesting! Thanks for this! When I exchanged some emails with ForeFlight tech support on this subject over a year ago, I was told the points could not be named. I will share this information with my students!
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
I just tried this again, and the text name does not show up in the printed navlog. Can’t post a photo here in the comment but it shows up in the navlog screen on Maps but not when you click Send To - Flights - Navlog (purple button).
@jantonitis8 ай бұрын
@@HolladayAviation hmmm… I see my user-defined waypoint name in the FPL tray (the bubbles when I enter airport names I’m FPL), the Navlog tab in FPL, and the print preview of the paper navlog when I click print. I’m using ForeFlight 15.10.1. Just the basic subscription. If I have time in the next day or so, I’ll record my screen and post a KZfaq video. Stay tuned.
@jantonitis8 ай бұрын
I just uploaded a video on KZfaq. It’s on my @jantonitis channel. It was recorded on a iPad Mini 6 using ForeFlight 15.10.1.
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
@@jantonitis ah, I see… you are going directly to Print, not to Navlog. Click on the purple button and you’ll see what I mean.
@misfittoytower5 ай бұрын
This is SUCH a useful video for me right now! (The only way it could be better *for me* is if you had used the horrible, archaic Piper performance charts. 😅) Thank you so much!
@ChampionJockey_James6 ай бұрын
It’s new technology why not use it… awesome video ❤
@mihailcojocari3934 ай бұрын
You can just touch the magenta line on the map connecting the departure and destination,and it will show you the course
@HolladayAviation4 ай бұрын
Yes, but we need to teach students where that number comes from, how it is derived.
@teodelfuego9 ай бұрын
That’s a pretty person
@jonasfloriani7 ай бұрын
Can you set more than one cruise altitude? In case you need to climb/descent mid flight?
@HolladayAviation7 ай бұрын
Yes. Select the waypoint in the Edit mode and then Set Altitude/Speed. These new parameters will appear on the navlog.
@jonasfloriani7 ай бұрын
thanks!@@HolladayAviation
@user-ej9jq2zf1y8 ай бұрын
I am in the market to purchase an iPad for using ForeFlight and have a question? Do I need to purchase an iPad with cellular service capability or will an iPad with only WiFI capability will work? Thanks!
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
Great question! The short answer is, the cellular enabled devices have standalone GPS capability, whereas with a Wi-Fi only device you will need to toggle to a GPS enabled device in order to have GPS position display on ForeFlight. My personal iPad is Wi-Fi only, because I toggle to the Garmin 650 or the Sentry mini in my airplanes.
@tylerwalker95077 ай бұрын
3:10 note that navigation with an expired chart is illegal, while it may help your situational awareness, flying with no chart is better from a legal standpoint!
@HolladayAviation7 ай бұрын
I said have a paper chart as a backup, not as the primary.
@kene88959 ай бұрын
What would you recommend other than foreflight?
@HolladayAviation9 ай бұрын
Garmin Pilot is the mostly equivalent app for Android users.
@kene88959 ай бұрын
Okay, thankyou.@@HolladayAviation
@badgerfishinski6857Ай бұрын
There is one caveat of not learning old school manual calculations. If the pilot just wants to be a Private Pilot, then sure he/she doesnt need to be oncerned with total technology failure while enroute. I'm OK with that thinking. However if we are grooming future career pilots who will be conducting more advanced flying careers then I wouid urge them to learn the E6B and learn how to use other means to manually calculate various navigation problems. Im a professional pilot of many years, and still on occassion use old school means for calculating. Just my opinion from my real every day flying.
@HolladayAviationАй бұрын
Thanks for your comment. To be clear, I never ever said or suggested that pilots should not know how to do basic calculations in their heads. Quite the opposite. The sad truth is that our educational system is churning out high school students who struggle with the fundamental arithmetic that is necessary for determining ground speed, fuel required, etc. I am fascinated by the manual, slide-rule style E6B and used it during my flight training 20 years ago, but the reality is that this device should not be necessary if one knows how to do basic math. ForeFlight is simply a tool just like the E6B was decades ago.
@AbdulBasithMulla-wy4ux2 ай бұрын
What is abeam?
@HolladayAviation2 ай бұрын
When you are “abeam the numbers” on the downwind leg in left traffic, the numbers should be under your left wing. It’s a way to describe your position.
@Boxer1250RTАй бұрын
Not a pilot or a student - when there is a certain technology available to make our lives easier, safer, more accurate, not using those tools seems pretty dumb to me. It's like one Doctor uses laparoscopic technology and cuts you 1" while the other old Dr. slices you 10" to perform the same work. I switched from traditional paper and pen to Cadd systems back in the mid 80s while the other Architects caught up in the mid 90s. I'd tell the DPE "relax dude we are not going back to doing anything by pan, paper calculators and those dumb E6B crap my dad used back in the 50s" :) You want to fail Me? Go ahead make my day 😂
@HolladayAviationАй бұрын
I’m sure there are DPE’s out there who may debate this but the FAA has made it very clear that the use of technology in general aviation is widely accepted.
@chrisstrobel34398 ай бұрын
I was thinking of taking flying lessons, but after watching this .. and being a mathematical idiot, I think maybe I’ll switch to hang gliders 🙄
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
It’s really not as hard as it seems, basic addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
@HolladayAviation8 ай бұрын
Trust me, I got a C in calculus, if I can do it, so can you!