"...a definitive and invaluable roadmap through a landscape of
shattered airplanes and lives in which the telling of each and every incident
offers a very real pass to avoiding the same fate."
--John J. Nance
Flying involves risks. Fortunately, most of these risks have been identified and managed down to remarkably low levels. However, accidents still occur, and the key to successful flight is an in-depth knowledge of the risks and how to effectively manage them.
Managing Risk: Best Practices for Pilots uses actual aircraft accident examples, statistics, aviation safety studies, and the authors' more than 60 years of combined experience as pilots and flight safety educators to document and describe the 10 most significant accident threat categories, and shed light on the applicable human-factor issues that make pilots vulnerable to them.
This book provides practical strategies as well as "best practice" countermeasures pilots can use to avoid or effectively manage risks during crucial phases of flight. Readers will have a more complete knowledge of the external threats to flight safety, coupled with a deeper understanding of how human errors often play out in the cockpit.
Students and pilots at all certificate levels will improve their risk management skills by learning the practices described in this book, and ATP applicants will find it fulfills a portion of the new knowledge requirements that become effective August 1, 2014.
Written by Dale Wilson and Gerald Binnema, with a Foreword by John J. Nance.
Softcover, 7-1/4" x 9", 248 pages. April 2014
If you find a better price elsewhere on this product we will Match that price and beat it by 10% of the difference. See Details.
Purchase today and you can return it in the original condition through Friday, January 12, 2024 ! See our return policy.
"...a definitive and invaluable roadmap through a landscape of
shattered airplanes and lives in which the telling of each and every incident
offers a very real pass to avoiding the same fate."
--John J. Nance
Flying involves risks. Fortunately, most of these risks have been identified and managed down to remarkably low levels. However, accidents still occur, and the key to successful flight is an in-depth knowledge of the risks and how to effectively manage them.
Managing Risk: Best Practices for Pilots uses actual aircraft accident examples, statistics, aviation safety studies, and the authors' more than 60 years of combined experience as pilots and flight safety educators to document and describe the 10 most significant accident threat categories, and shed light on the applicable human-factor issues that make pilots vulnerable to them.
This book provides practical strategies as well as "best practice" countermeasures pilots can use to avoid or effectively manage risks during crucial phases of flight. Readers will have a more complete knowledge of the external threats to flight safety, coupled with a deeper understanding of how human errors often play out in the cockpit.
Students and pilots at all certificate levels will improve their risk management skills by learning the practices described in this book, and ATP applicants will find it fulfills a portion of the new knowledge requirements that become effective August 1, 2014.
Written by Dale Wilson and Gerald Binnema, with a Foreword by John J. Nance.
Softcover, 7-1/4" x 9", 248 pages. April 2014
Tools to help pilots assess each situation and make every flight the safest possible, with the least amount of risk.
If you find a better price elsewhere on this product we will match that price and beat it by 10% of the difference.
Purchase today and you can return it in the original condition through Monday, January 01, 2024 ! See our return policy.