If your instrument training was as
haphazard and unstructured as that of most
general aviation pilots, then this book may
cause a profound change in your method for
managing the extraordinary demands of
single-pilot IFR. With the help of this
book, you will establish your own personal
standard operating practices for IFR.,
including the incorporation of checklists,
flows, callouts, briefings, and "by the
numbers" aircraft control. Your flying will
be much less haphazard, and much more
regimented, structured, and above all, safe.
...a wholesale review and analysis of IFR
operations with special emphasis on the
integration of GPS into modern IFR. This is
long overdue. Tens of thousands of general
aviation IFR pilots are now using GPS. Most
of these pilots took their last ground
school or IFR written exam years before the
advent of GPS and have never really studied
the new system. Instructors see the effects
of this lack of training all the time.
Many pilots have only a perfunctory
knowledge of how the GPS systems works, and
how it sometimes fails to work. Many
pilots comprehend only a small fraction of
the capabilities of their specific GPS
units. Even more commonly seen are
failures to understand the new regulations
that govern GPS use and the newly formatted
charts that have evolved with the GPS
approaches. There are a great many
subtleties here, and it is time for serious
instrument pilots to roll up their sleeves
and get to work bringing themselves up to
date.