Airport Lighting/markings
Airspace
Weather
VOR/GPS
Random
100

How do you depict a closed runway and where do you look?

Yellow X on the runway. Look in the NOTAMS 

100

Tell me about class D:

 Generally how wide and how far up does a class D airspace go?

 What airspace does it revert to if the tower is closed? 

What is needed?

Generally extends from the surface up to 2,500 feet. Normally 4nm radius.

 If the tower is closed, will revert to a class E.

 Two way radio communication, no certification needed. 

100

What is the atmosphere composed of?

78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 1% other gases.

100

What does VOR stand for and what is it?

Very high omnidirectional range. Ground based facility, that is used for course guidance. VOR shoots radials out in all different directions allowing us to track to and from the VOR

100

What are the 3 most common wind indicators?

Windsock, wind tee, and tetrahedron 

200

What color is the taxiway centerline and what does it look like?

Yellow and it’s a solid line. 

200

Class A: 

Where is it?

What is needed: 

Weather mins?

18,000-FL600, overlying the waters within 12nm of the coast of the 48 contiguous states 

Instrument rated pilot and instrument rated plane on an IFR flight plan

none. 

200

What causes weather and wind? 

Unequal heating of the earth. 

200

VOR limitations:

VOR uses line of sight, which means terrain and obstructions can bloc the signals. 

200

What are the 2 different types of NOTAMS and explain when each might be given.

Type D: Relative to the airport. 

Type FDC: Navigation system is down 

300

What color are the taxiway edge lights at night?

Blue 

300

What is a MOA. What is it depicted by? Can you fly through them?

Military operating area. Contains military training activities. Depicted with magenta hash marks. Yes you can fly through them, but use extreme caution. 

300

What way does a low pressure system vs a high pressure system flow? 

High: down, outward, clockwise

Low: inward, upward, counterclockwise

300

Checking VOR accuracy: how often and how?

Every 30 days. There are 4 ways: ground, airborne, dual, and VOT. Ground: found in chart supplement where to go, max error is +/- 4. 

Airborne: +/-6 

Dual: using 2 vor receivers compare the 2 indications to one another. +/-4. 

VOT: ground stations that are used specifically to test VOR receivers. These VOR test facilities only transmit one radial the 360 radial. Max difference +/-4. 

300

What is a TFR? Why would a TFR be issued?

Airspace that temporarily restricts certain aircraft from operating within a defined area. Issued by NOTAM. Would be issued by VIP(president), airshows, events with more than 30,000 people, emergency air traffic rules, disaster hazards. 

400

What is the importance of the runway holding position marking? What does it look like? 

Safety boundary that prevents runway incursions. Ensures aircraft will stop at a safe distance away from the runway until they get the clearance or confirm there is no conflicting traffic at non towered airports. It’s made up of 2 solid lines and 2 dashed yellow lines. 

400

Tell me about the Class B:

How far up does it usually go and what generally shape is it?

What is needed when you enter?

What are the weather minimums?

Surface up to 10,000 ft usually the busy airports. Looks like a wedding cake with lots of layers 

You need at least a private pilot license. Or a student pilot with an endorsement. ATC clearance and mode C transponder.

3 COC

400

What are the 4 layers of the atmosphere?

Troposphere

Stratosphere 

Mesosphere

thermosphere

400

What is reverse sensing?

VOR indicator will work backwards. The indicator will tell you to turn left even though you need to turn right. To prevent this, make sure to always set the opposite radial to the one you want to track. 
400
Explain the Coriolis effect

Apparent force created by the rotation of the earth. This effect influences the path of earths weather. 

500

Airport beacons: when will they operate and what’s the purpose? What color beacon flashes at Logan?

They will operate at night or below standard VFR. Help identify the different airports. White and green because its a civilian land airport.

500

What does SVFR allow you to do and what is it?

Special VFR. Allows VFR pilots to take off with reduced visibility when mins are below standard. Flight vis must be at least 1 SM and remain clear of clouds. You have to obtain from ATC. At night, pilot and plane must be IFR equipped. 

500

What is a ridge? What is a trough?

Ridge: area of high pressure 

trough: area of low pressure 

500

What is RAIM?

Receiver autonomous integrity monitoring

the GPS signal reaching your plane may be weak, or you may not have enough satellites to safely say your location. 

Raim uses an extra satellite to cross check the other satelites and tell you if they are reading accurate. 

500

What is an isobar?

Lines of equal pressure on a weather chart. When they are closer together, more windy. Further apart means less winds