Best study material for instrument

mward

New Member
I am getting ready for my instrument rating and asking anyone and everyone to recommend which training kit is best in their opinion. Personally I used the king schools CD-ROM kit for my private and liked it, however I would like to hear about the other study materials that other people have used and how they liked them. Thanks for any recommendations.
 
Matt,

Not sure what syllabus your flight school uses, but most flight schools that I have been to, used, heard of, etc. use Jeppesen syllabus. Jepp makes a great Inst/ Comm kit that most people like and if your flight school already uses Jepp, then you're ahead of the game. I would find out what syllabus your specific flight school uses and go with that. If you feel you need the DVD or CD's then they are available.

I hope this helps. Just remember what works for one person may not work for you, so don't think you are locked into one system.
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Jeppesen has a great computer based training program they call Fliteschool. It is set up to paralell their other books, and gives a little interactive section on what would be each section, within the chapters in their books. Then asks some random sample questions from the test pool after each question. There is also included, the FAR/AIM and complete text of the book. When ready, take 3 sample test I think, with at least 2 of them over 80%, and a certificate can be printed out. Your CFI can sign that, saying they have reviewed your home study course. That meets the knowledge test recommendation requirement, and worked a lot better for me than sitting in a ground school on someone else's schedule. I used the software for both Instrument, and Commercial ratings. Highly recommended, and not as corny as the King stuff.

I got an insanely good deal on the Jepp instrument/comm ultimate kit or whatever it is called, which included all materials, including the Fliteschool CDs for both of those ratings. It was somewhere around a couple hundred new, where most places have it going for twice that or more. I don't recall the exact price, but the price of each piece of the software individually would have been only like $10 less than the entire kit I got. Maybe check ebay, these things come up now and then.

HTH,
Josh
 
I can't tell you which kit works well... I never used one... but I would like to say that, regardless of what materials you buy for your instrument, you should buy the FAA's Instrument Flying Handbook as a supplement. I've found the Instrument Flying Handbook to be by far the best instrument 'textbook' out there!
 
Oh yeah, the FAA has a new IFR Procedures Handbook. It is really new, not even printed yet. There is a link to the PDF file they have (it is free) from the CFI section of my web site.

Josh
 
I think the Jeppesen training kits cover a good amount of material.
 
[ QUOTE ]
Oh yeah, the FAA has a new IFR Procedures Handbook. It is really new, not even printed yet. There is a link to the PDF file they have (it is free) from the CFI section of my web site.

[/ QUOTE ]

Great find, Josh--it looks pretty good from what I've read so far...picks up where the intrument flying handbook left off and makes some semblance of sense of the AIM.
 
Yeah, I noticed this, and the recent revision of the PHAK I got a few months back. Both are getting more Jeppesen like.

I'm going through the new FAA stuff, getting page references to give for reading assignments.
 
[ QUOTE ]
Yeah, I noticed this, and the recent revision of the PHAK I got a few months back. Both are getting more Jeppesen like.

I'm going through the new FAA stuff, getting page references to give for reading assignments.

[/ QUOTE ]

The FAA is realizing that Jepp can do most things better than they can!!! You saw the trend start with approach plates....now it'll continue!!! I predict low enroutes will be next.....
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Hmm. Yeah. Makes you wonder who made the first IFR charts. Should have just left it at that, and never let the government get their hands into it.
 
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