korben88
Line Up and Wait
Now that I'm in the cross country flight planning phase of training I'm just wondering which of the various flight planning worksheets you guys recommend.
LOL I did the same thing except I went "shiz, there are ton of these things."I just typed vfr flight log into google and picked the first one. They are pretty much all the same
This is what I ended up liking the most when I was doing my student cross countries. The feature I liked most is that it is set up to fold in half and give you these panels:I, for one, am a HUUUUUUUGE fan of this particular flight log. Not that there's any sort of extra information on there (actually, there is a bit), but its really helpful in that it folds up nicely (if you follow their "user instructions") and fits onto a kneeboard.
http://www.dauntless-soft.com/PRODUCTS/Freebies/VFRFlightPlanner/
EDIT: If you click on the link and scroll down to the bottom of the page, it actually gives you a few variations of which planner to download. They all contain the same information, just organized differently. Check it out to see which one you like the best!
I, for one, am a HUUUUUUUGE fan of this particular flight log. Not that there's any sort of extra information on there (actually, there is a bit), but its really helpful in that it folds up nicely (if you follow their "user instructions") and fits onto a kneeboard.
http://www.dauntless-soft.com/PRODUCTS/Freebies/VFRFlightPlanner/
EDIT: If you click on the link and scroll down to the bottom of the page, it actually gives you a few variations of which planner to download. They all contain the same information, just organized differently. Check it out to see which one you like the best!
This is what I ended up liking the most when I was doing my student cross countries. The feature I liked most is that it is set up to fold in half and give you these panels:
Outside front cover: Frequencies, large area for notes, and area to copy ATIS, all of which you might write while in flight
Inside left panel: Flight planning information that you wrote down before the flight and won't have to change in the air
Inside right panel: Flight planning information that you may have to change or fill in in the air, like actual leg times
Rear cover: Flight plan, weight and balance, and various other information that you will fill out on the ground and maybe refer to in the air, printed upside-down
So you fold it and clip the inside right panel to your kneeboard. You can close it to look at and write on the front cover, open it to see the left panel and write on the right panel, and lift it up (still clipped to the kneeboard) to read the back cover. I liked it so much that I copied that format for my own VFR and IFR navlogs. I used Word but should re-do them in Excel to get some automatic calculation. The difference between the VFR and IFR versions is that the IFR one has a lot of navaid information while the VFR one has a bigger box to describe the checkpoint. Both of them are somewhat simplified from Dauntless. But there's is a great starting point.