Hiya Denny,
I think you skipped the requisite opening line, which is required in every forum I've been in -- when polling the audience.
"O Masters, Who Own All Knowledge, Help me, An Insignificant Speck"
(just kidding -- mostly -- PoA is better than most forums for that, although this thread started a little rough)
Also the caps didn't help, but you figured that one out too. Welcome to the internet
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I didn't see if you had much G1000 time prior to buying your awesome machine, and I think "get a CFI" is the default answer for any aviation question. ...why you've received this advice 10x when you've already explained that you have one, and are merely looking to study up in advance of your meeting -- is baffling to me.
You're excited and need resources to research. If you're like me, you're going to collect 100 nuggets of psuedo-trivia and ask your CFI to knock down the 80% that don't apply to your new machine, and you won't be satisfied until he's provided full and complete reasoning for keeping the other 20%.
So let's get started.
If HP/Complex is new to you, you'll need to get going on a few important concepts:
Thermal and Heat Management
Power Settings
Engine Management
...and you will need these topics covered specific to your airplane, which will incorporate how to use the turbo and G1000 engine monitor.
Adding in the Turbo, you get an important new concept:
How not to kill the engine using the Turbocharger (over-boost and too-high CHT/TIT)
and you may as well throw in Oxygen use and Oximetry if you ever take it high, which you will eventually. That's the point of the thing!
...I thought the 182T had an automatic wastegate, but you should read into the system in great detail and get an understanding of how it works ad a functional level. It's pretty cool. The POH will get you started, then research the concepts that were not well-presented by Cessna. It can be as simple as asking google "what is a wastegate??" and you'll get a deluge of answers, many informative.
Last, I would do G1000-specific things. After all, the 182 is still just an airplane while you look outside of it.
For VFR flying, it's cake. The PC Sim and the Instructional DVD came with your plane in the Garmin bag. The Sim is lame, but the DVD, while dry, is very informative. You probably already watched it. If so, you now know where things are, and you know that the G1000, for VFR use, is basically a plane with square gauges instead of round ones.
If you're IFR, you'll want to get very cozy with the GPS features of the G1000, and practice them in great detail. They're fantastic. I recommend a prepared ground course for any IFR work in a G1000.
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I think that's enough to fill your week while you wait to meet up with your CFI, who will roll his eyes at you when you spout all of this new knowledge at him. Let him, you're paying him to do it. He's just jealous after all.
So here's my advice:
1. For general operational practice, I would join the Cessna Pilot's Association. Not only will you get a warmer response there (because you've already professed love for the Cessna brand, and share that common bond -- which improves civility, and skips the above requirement to supplicate to the forum before asking questions), you'll also get some excellent technical resources, as well as a pool of knowledge to draw deeply from. Also they will all toast your new acquisition warmly. You'll learn about everything 182 and everything T182 there.
2. For the Complex, HP, and Turbo stuff, I would Google up Deakin's "Pelican's Perch" and read everything there that pertains to your airplane. Read the technical stuff twice. Read the Turbo stuff twice. I would read them with a notepad nearby so you can jot down CFI questions. You might email the questions early, because your CFI will have some homework to do himself to get everything answered for you.
Also google up "How it Flies", a free online book which can describe the constant-speed prop to you. Since the CS prop operation is a common question and difficult to explain, let Google run free and find you 100 explanations on the topic. Find one that sticks in your brain -- not all will.
For the oximetry stuff, for extra credit, look up NTSB reports involving loss of consciousness and pilot's misuse of Oxygen. There was a particularly hideous one involving a Beech 56TC which I refer to myself every so often.
While you're in there, research in-flight turbo fires. It's a real thing. I hope you will keep your oil lines and turbo plumbing in the best condition money can buy. Your new 182 has you WAY ahead of the curve here, but let's also think long-term safety. A pre-flight peek at the turbo is time well spent. Your CFI can elaborate for you and point out where things are under the hood.
3. For the G1000 stuff, if you're looking to get deeper than the Garmin DVDs, I can recommend googling up Max Trescott's Books and DVDs. The King course is also decent, but for the money, I found it inferior.
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I hope that's a start for ya. Your enthusiasm is contagious, and you make me want to go flying today, instead of nursing this "spin training hangover" I'm suffering.
Congrats on the new wings.
And this is only my $0.02 -- feel free to find 100% of my post unappetizing to you, the mob, or the CFI
- Mike