Jump to content

Tablet App for plates


Recommended Posts

Sure -- Jeppesen sells electronic subscriptions to their charts and approach plates. You can check it out at the Jeppesen web site. Also, the Foreflight app for iPads is available.

 

However, you can also go to the FAA site for TERPS (TERminal Procedures) and download PDFs containing the complete publication (including STARS, takeoff minimums, and much more), just as if you had the paper version of the FAA charts. The SW1 (which includes Denver and Albuquerque) is 690 pages, with the first approach plate on page 115. There are 26 of these, for the complete set.

 

You can also download individual plates from airnav.com.

 

There are a few others, too.

 

Larry N.

As Skylab would say:

Remember: Aviation is NOT an exact Science!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi...

 

If you happen to live in North America and have a tablet - FltPlan.com has a full blown FREE tablet app called "FltPlan GO" (apple, android, windows) - it's a real world Electronic Flight Bag that includes your typical moving map software, charts, and plates - with connections to Flight Simulator (FSX/P3D/XP) and is the only source of FREE geo-referenced approach plates/taxi diagrams I'm aware of... Best thing since sliced bread in my book and it's FREE... I use it on every flight and it makes IFR Approaches child's play...

 

https://fltplan.com/

 

 

923cc9af81a2ac9ffb69636ab2c65539.png

 

 

4d46ba01c522ceefd2e50c702662fc2f.png

 

 

3976cd860b22143aa8d9321793686630.png

 

 

0f0d774529712da086c5117b17ba1011.png

 

 

Regards,

Scott

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

bJQZKiw.png
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...