Before anyone accuses me of being a Luddite, I want to share that I do own a software company, and there’s no bigger fan of ForeFlight than me.
Still, when I did my instrument rating, I tried being totally iPad-centric, but it was hard. In turbulence under the Foggles, by the time I navigated through the app and got whatever info I needed, my instructor would be tapping his little pencil on the altimeter because I drifted a hundred feet off altitude.
After a few hours like this, I tried some other ways. Believe it or not, for me the most efficient idea was...printed charts on a clipboard. With a little thought, I could plan the flight on ForeFlight, and print all the charts I might need, from airport diagrams to approach plates. It might be my old eyes, but by printing things like the approach plates a little bigger, I spent less time searching for information. In fact, you get pretty good at arranging the various chart pages such that you’re just pulling one page off the stack and the next one you need follows. And the little clipboard fits anywhere.
The extent of my equipment then was an 8x10 acrylic clipboard that I drilled a hole through so I could tie a pen to it. Yes, I had the iPad (and the iPhone) in case I needed a chart I didn’t think to print before the flight, but at least for me, the old fashioned way seemed to work best.