GravityHater
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2004
- Posts
- 1,168
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GravityHater said:Where can I get a simple 8x5 lighted kneeboard with a clip for paper and elastic strap?
oops maybe you think this is dorky but I am getting tired of fumbling with the current lapboard.
bobbysamd said:My instructor actually taught me not to use a kneeboard. He said they were wastes of money. He taught me just to spread the sectional on my lap during a cross-country and to manage my flight logs in the same space. It worked. But what did my instructor know?
Later, I thought I needed a kneeboard, so I wasted all kinds of money at Sporty's and elsewhere for folding kneeboards, military-style battery-lighted kneeboards, aluminum flight "desks" and other kinds of similar junk. In the final analysis, as always, my instructor was right. I found that I felt uncomfortable having such junk sitting on my lap. It usually wound up on the seat next to me.
As an instructor, I needed a way to manage my students' flight synopses (lesson plans) in flight, along with managing my pen. So, I obtained an ordinary clipboard and that became my kneeboard for instructional flights.
While some would argue that they need a place to put their E6-B or CR whizwheel(s), there are smaller versions that can fit in your shirt pocket, a la Ernest Gann. And you can still stow your equipment in the side pockets of the airplane.
Don't waste your money on kneeboards. If you want to spend money on cockpit gear, spend it on extra flashlights. There never seem to be enough working flashlights during typical night flights.
Is it just me or are hotel notepads getting thinner and smaller each month?Wang Chung said:I'm also a huge fan of the swiped hotel notepad. Well, except for the Holiday Inn pads cuz they're kinda small and skinny.
Nah, the airline pilots just tell the FA under the panel to look up, then write the clearance on the FA's forehead.minitour said:...that said...any airline people out there...maybe I'm wrong, but I'd assume you don't use 'em with FMSs and electronic kneeboards n such...how does that stuff compare? (other than the obvious)
-mini
Be careful with those....some have something on them that can be bad for EFIS screens. If you use them enough, you will begin to see streaks in them like a poorly cleaned window - but the "streaks" won't go away.Lead Sled said:Hey, don't forget about the little shoe shine mitts - they work great for cleaning your glasses and the EFIS screens.![]()
Notepads would be the best FBO freebie giveaway item.FracCapt said:I agree with many of the previous posters....the notepads from hotels work great in those cases! Actually, when I checked into the hotel today, I stuffed the notepads in my bag since we're almost out in the airplane!![]()
Most, if not all, EFIS screens have a thin layer of transparent protective coating on them. If the screens get scratched, but not all the way through the layer....they can fix them with some type of compound that can be rubbed on and fill the scratches. The "proof" that I've seen was screens that had to be replaced because the protective coating had been eaten away by something - and the glass itself severely scratched by microfibers in whatever they were using to clean the screens. The crew said all they ever used to wipe the screens was the shoe mitts they got at hotels. The avionics tech called the manufacturer, and they said NEVER use those things on the screens, because some contain chemicals that are great for shining up leather....but destroy the coating on the screens.Lead Sled said:I hadn't heard that before. You say you've actually seen it yourself?
so if you like being prepared and organized you shouldn't fly anything but a 152? hmmm...CaSyndrm said:If you need a tool on your leg, your not ready for anything other than flight instructing in the mighty C152