Weather Flying |  | Author: Robert Buck Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy Used: $14.44 as of 9/7/2010 16:55 CDT details You Save: $15.51 (52%)
New (25) Used (31) from $14.44
Seller: Lilly4U Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 52,936
Media: Hardcover Edition: 4 Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.3 x 1.2
ISBN: 007008761X Dewey Decimal Number: 629.1324 EAN: 9780070087613 ASIN: 007008761X
Publication Date: September 1, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | Bob Buck's Weather Flying is one of the most widely read books on weather! |
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Product Description Weather Flying is regarded in the industry as the bible of weather flying. Robert Buck, a general aviation and commercial pilot with tens of thousands of hours of flight time, explains weather in a nontechnical way, giving pilots useful understanding of weather and practical knowledge of how to judge it and fly it. Covers weather flying psychology, en route weather changes, radar and how to use it, taking off in bad weather, and much more. Winner of the Flight Safety Foundation's Publication Award; recommended by the FAA.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 12
The real-world truth about IMC July 30, 1999 23 out of 24 found this review helpful
Buck entertains and teaches. Alone, that is a talent, but add to that Buck's experience and his ability to observe and anticipate our weaknesses as pilots, and this book becomes a valuable down and dirty reality check. If you are a high-time pilot or just getting under the hood for real, read this book. There is a particular joy to flying with the clouds. The style of Buck's writing captures this uniqueness. It also warns the pilot of the consequences of not preparing for the same event. Weather Flying is a fast read, yet might just save you from being tangled up in a ball of scrap aluminum.
A pilot's perspective of flying the weather. September 27, 1997 Paladin (Maryland) 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
Bob Buck is a retired airline captain who spent over 30 years flying for Trans World Airlines. He is also regarded as first person to make reading about weather interesting. This is the book he wrote to convey the pilot's perspective of flying through fronts, circumnavigating thunderstorms, and surviving icing conditions. If you are a pilot desirous of learning about how to predict weather, learning the tricks of the pros, and how to get there through the 'muck', this is the book to read. It is not an easy read, and Buck assumes you already know some weather basics, but it puts together all that you learned reading those boring FAA manuals, and Buck makes it interesting. (This is a review of the first edition, Weather Flying is now in its fourth edtion.)
My favorite instrument flying primer. April 29, 2001 Tom Jensen (Auburn, WA USA) 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
I got my instrument rating 25 years ago, and Buck's Weather Flying recommendations are still fresh and pertinent. A friend just shared that she is going to tackle an instrument rating, and Weather Flying came to mind as the perfect gift to make a safe pilot. I still use his practical recommendations in my infrequent IFR flights, and feel that it has contributed to making me a safer pilot. Sorry if this sounds a bit corny, but few books have stuck with me like this. PS: If you're interested, try T.R. Fehrenbach's "The Reckoning" or "This Kind of War" if you want something that will also stick with you through life.Tom
Very Enjoyable and Understandable Reading July 1, 1999 Brian Buckstiegel 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
A very informative and easy-to-read book on weather flying. Being a student pilot, I found the book very helpful in understanding the weather around us. Makes you "think" before you "fly". Definitely enjoyed the book ;)
"The sky is my office" June 30, 2005 Jeremy W. Forstadt (Pawtucket, RI) 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
It is hard to imagine a pilot with more weather flying experience than Captain Robert Buck. And much of this flying was in the old days: in the early years of the Army Air Corp and a young company called TWA. Much of this flying was accomplished without the assistance of modern instrumentation. Captain Buck travelled the world seeking the most ornery weather he could find, and then flew into it time and time again, compiling the experience and collecting the data that no one else had at the time. Captain Buck shares that experience here. This book is interesting and engaging to the flying enthusiast, essential to the VFR pilot, and absolutely priceless to the aspiring instrument pilot. Every discipline and every pastime has its classics, and WEATHER FLYING is, without a doubt, one of the classics of aviation.
The language of WEATHER FLYING is simple and straightforward. The lessons are practical more than theoretical, though Captain Buck keeps his readers briefed on essential weather theory as well. Virtually every weather situation that a pilot can encounter is covered in this book, from the ordinary to the exotic. Then Captain Buck instructs you how to fly it. The concept is simple and direct; the lessons are comprehensive and pragmatic.
In short, this is not a book to read once and then shelve. The lessons are too important to be forgotten. This is a manual to be taken down and read over and over again by any sort of pilot who flies any sort of aircraft.
Jeremy W. Forstadt
Showing reviews 1-5 of 12
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